Today: 20 May 2026
Tesla stock price slides early as China AI training report and Europe sales warnings hit TSLA
6 February 2026
2 mins read

Tesla stock price slides early as China AI training report and Europe sales warnings hit TSLA

New York, Feb 6, 2026, 09:32 EST — Regular session

  • Tesla shares dipped in early New York trading as investors digested new headlines on China and AI.
  • Fresh European registration figures suggest increasing competition for the EV maker.
  • U.S. policymakers’ ongoing focus on self-driving regulations keeps autonomy squarely in play.

Tesla shares dropped 2.2% to $397.21 in early Friday trading, reacting to news of the company running an AI training center in China. The stock had closed at $406.32 the previous session.

Tesla’s pitch to investors hinges on more than just car sales. It places a strong bet on software and assisted-driving tech, with China standing as the fiercest arena for these battles.

The timing couldn’t be worse. Investors are already retreating from tech and growth stocks, grappling with which sectors AI will boost and which it will disrupt beyond repair.

Chinese media outlet Cailianshe reported Tesla has set up an AI training centre in China, concentrating on “local application and assisted driving,” according to Tesla Vice President Tao Lin. Reuters

Assisted driving, shorthand for advanced driver-assistance systems, involves software that aids with steering or speed control but still needs a human behind the wheel. For Tesla, even a slight acceleration in this area grabs more attention than a typical product update.

In Europe, the latest figures tell a different story. Volkswagen surpassed Tesla as the leading battery-electric vehicle (BEV) seller in 2025, delivering 274,278 BEVs compared to Tesla’s 236,357, according to JATO Dynamics. Tesla’s registrations dropped 27%, while VW’s climbed 56%, the data revealed.

UK sales numbers reveal the strain. Tesla’s deliveries tumbled over 57% in January, dropping to just 647 vehicles, according to New Automotive data. Meanwhile, Chinese competitor BYD sold 1,326 battery electric vehicles, a jump of nearly 21%. “British consumers are still moving towards cars with plugs, and away from those without,” said Tanya Sinclair, chief executive of Electric Vehicles UK. Reuters

Washington is pushing autonomy back into focus. This week, Tesla and Alphabet’s Waymo called on Congress to finally advance stalled legislation designed to accelerate self-driving car deployment, cautioning that the U.S. could lose ground to China. Tesla’s vehicle engineering VP Lars Moravy stressed that lawmakers “must modernize regulations that inhibit industry’s ability to innovate.” Reuters

Setting Tesla aside, growth stocks have taken a hit. Dave Harrison Smith, chief investment officer and head of technology investing at Bailard, called the retreat in U.S. software and data services shares a “sell-everything mindset” at work. Reuters

But Tesla’s risks remain clear: competition is heating up, regulators are setting the tempo for self-driving deployment, and legal challenges keep mounting. This week, a California judge ruled that a movie studio presented a “seemingly valid and plausible theory” of copyright infringement in a lawsuit over images used to promote Tesla’s autonomous cybercab. Reuters

Traders are turning their attention to key macro data that could shift rate expectations and impact pricey growth-stock valuations: the January U.S. nonfarm payrolls report, set for Wednesday (Feb. 11), followed by the consumer price index on Friday (Feb. 13).

Stock Market Today

  • Jim Cramer's Top 10 Stock Market Watchlist for May 20
    May 20, 2026, 9:33 AM EDT. Jim Cramer's top 10 focuses on Nvidia's earnings, with futures higher ahead of the report amid a three-day S&P 500 slump. Cramer notes skepticism around Nvidia due to Amazon and Google's chip developments. Google's AI updates caused a 2% share drop but remain a key position. Target posted a strong beat with 5.6% same-store sales growth and raised net sales guidance. Lowe's reaffirmed outlook despite a 2% stock dip. TJX Companies outperformed with 6% same-store sales growth, shares up over 4%. MongoDB saw a price target increase but retains a cautious hold rating amid enterprise software uncertainty. Market moves also follow President Trump's Iran war comments impacting oil and rates.

Latest articles

AmpliTech Jumps After 5G Approval Clears North America Sales Path

AmpliTech Jumps After 5G Approval Clears North America Sales Path

20 May 2026
AmpliTech received U.S. and Canadian certification for its full indoor 5G Native DAS hardware, enabling immediate commercial sales and integration across North America. Shares rose about 14% in premarket trading after the announcement. The company said it has orders from a North American mobile network operator, with shipments set to begin later this year.
Intuit’s Q3 Numbers Land as Shares Down 39%

Intuit’s Q3 Numbers Land as Shares Down 39%

20 May 2026
Intuit will report fiscal third-quarter results after U.S. markets close Wednesday, following a 39% stock drop over the past year. Analysts expect earnings of $12.57 per share on $8.54 billion revenue, both up from last year. The quarter covers peak tax season for TurboTax and QuickBooks. Intuit shares closed at $399.71 Tuesday, down 0.9%.
Amazon Leans Into AI With Hiring Focus Jeff Bezos Made Famous

Amazon Leans Into AI With Hiring Focus Jeff Bezos Made Famous

20 May 2026
Amazon Web Services’ AI services are generating over $15 billion in annualized revenue, CEO Andy Jassy said, as the company plans about $200 billion in capital spending tied to AI infrastructure for 2026. Jassy told employees AI could help AWS reach $600 billion in annual sales by 2036. Investors are pressing Amazon and rivals to justify heavy AI spending.
Gold price rebounds after violent selloff as traders brace for more volatility
Previous Story

Gold price rebounds after violent selloff as traders brace for more volatility

Google stock price slips as Alphabet’s AI spending push keeps GOOG in focus
Next Story

Google stock price slips as Alphabet’s AI spending push keeps GOOG in focus

Go toTop