Today: 18 June 2026
Tesla shares bounce on China sales jump, robot efforts face fresh challenges
3 June 2026
2 mins read

Tesla shares bounce on China sales jump, robot efforts face fresh challenges

New York, June 2, 2026, 18:07 EDT

Tesla shares gained 1.9% to $423.74 in post-market trading Tuesday, recouping some ground after falling 4.6% Monday. Investors reacted as new data out of China and Europe made the demand case look clearer than on Monday. The Wall Street Journal

Tesla’s stock still relies on more than just car sales. Investors are pricing in not only electric vehicles but also hope for self-driving software, robotaxis and humanoid robots. Delays carry a high cost, with competition getting tougher in those areas.

Tesla’s EV sales out of China climbed to 85,982 in May, up 39.4% from last year, according to China Passenger Car Association numbers. That covers Model 3s and Model Ys made in Shanghai for China, Europe, and elsewhere. The data marks a seventh month in a row of gains, Reuters said. Reuters

European car registrations surged in several countries, with France up 655% to 5,446 vehicles and Norway gaining 29% to 3,345, Reuters said, citing national data. Denmark jumped 136%, Spain added 113%, Portugal moved up 349%, and Sweden climbed 71%. Italy dropped 23.5%. Registrations are tracked before full company sales figures. Reuters

Tesla is getting a lift from overall battery-electric car market growth, even though its market share is shrinking, ING Research senior economist Rico Luman said. TP ICAP Midcap analyst Julien Thomas said the Model Y is “capturing significant demand” and strikes a “good balance between price and range.” Reuters

Competition isn’t letting up. BYD, Tesla’s top Chinese rival, kept up solid export volumes to Europe and beyond and broke its eight-month global losing streak. Tesla, according to Reuters, is still waiting on the green light from Chinese regulators to launch its latest driver-assistance tech. Reuters

Major indexes finished mixed. The Dow was up 0.45%, the S&P 500 added 0.13%, and the Nasdaq edged up 0.03%. AI optimism gave markets a lift but Middle East risks lingered. “Muted at the surface level” is how Mike Dickson, who heads portfolio management at Horizon Investments, put it, though he said there’s “a lot going on under the hood.” Reuters

AI news weighed on Tesla. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman posted on X that OpenAI Robotics is hiring hardware, operations, systems and machine-learning engineers. That brought attention back to Tesla’s Optimus robot program and raised the question if robotics will be a busy, expensive field instead of a Tesla-driven bet. X (formerly Twitter)

Tesla has already flagged higher spending to investors. Back in April, the company bumped its 2026 capital spending plan above $25 billion, with the money going to AI, robotics and chips. Capital spending means money for long-term assets like factories and tech infrastructure. CFO Vaibhav Taneja called this a “very big capital-investment phase” and said Tesla expects negative free cash flow — defined as cash left after ops and capex — through the rest of 2026. Reuters

Tesla is leaning on investors to back future self-driving and robotaxi revenue even before its core auto business comes back, Thomas Monteiro, senior analyst at Investing.com, said earlier this year. He called “rollout metrics — not deliveries” the key leading indicator from now on. Reuters

Tesla’s rebound could still falter. May numbers look better, but they aren’t proof the recovery has legs—registrations and factory shipments can run ahead of true demand. Tesla is still dealing with price cuts, tough competition from Chinese EVs, questions about driver-assist, and unanswered lawsuits over Autopilot, Full Self-Driving and Robotaxi promises. Delays on China approval, a soft sales figure from Germany or Britain this week, or slower-than-expected Robotaxi or Optimus news could hit the stock hard where valuation is highest. sec.gov

Stock Market Today

  • China Resources New Energy Sets Price for Shenzhen IPO to Raise up to $3.6 Billion
    June 17, 2026, 11:02 PM EDT. China Resources New Energy has priced its initial public offering (IPO) in Shenzhen at 10.11 yuan per share. The company aims to raise as much as 24.5 billion yuan ($3.6 billion) if the option to sell additional shares is fully exercised. This filing marks the largest IPO in Shenzhen, highlighting strong investor interest in China's renewable energy sector.

Latest articles

Wall Street Slips After Hours, Fed Flags Rate Risk

Wall Street Slips After Hours, Fed Flags Rate Risk

18 June 2026
S&P 500 plunged 1.2%, Nasdaq 1.3%, and Dow 507 points after the Fed held rates steady but signaled a possible hike, raising its 2026 rate forecast to 3.8% and PCE inflation projection to 3.6%; all 11 S&P sectors fell, megacap tech stocks slumped, and after-hours index ETFs stayed lower as traders face a shortened week before Juneteenth.
Meta Drops as Fed Signal Hurts Nasdaq, AI Bet Draws Scrutiny

Meta Drops as Fed Signal Hurts Nasdaq, AI Bet Draws Scrutiny

18 June 2026
Meta plunged 5.5% to $567.58, underperforming the Nasdaq, after the Federal Reserve signaled possible future rate hikes and a key Meta executive tied to AI-agent work departed, raising pressure on Meta to prove its costly AI investments can deliver returns as higher rates threaten future profit values.
Microsoft Drops as AI Spend Concerns, Fed Rate News Hit Shares

Microsoft Drops as AI Spend Concerns, Fed Rate News Hit Shares

18 June 2026
Microsoft plunged 3.8% to $378.91—outpacing the Nasdaq’s 1.3% drop—as investors reacted to a possible 2026 Fed rate hike and mounting scrutiny over Microsoft’s soaring AI spending, with capex projected at $190 billion for 2026 and a shareholder lawsuit alleging inadequate Azure growth disclosures adding further pressure.
AT&T Shares Halt Six-Day Drop Ahead of Cash Flow Update
Previous Story

AT&T Shares Halt Six-Day Drop Ahead of Cash Flow Update

Quantum computing stocks face a holiday week after IonQ stake filing and a Rigetti downgrade
Next Story

IonQ Stock Jumped Again. A Giant Quantum IPO Is Putting the Trade on Trial

Go toTop