New York, May 12, 2026, 17:11 EDT
- Tesla shares traded at $433.45, off roughly 2.7%. The stock moved between an early session high of about $447.56 and a low close to $422.39.
- Stocks that rely on distant future profits took a hit after the CPI came in hotter and Treasury yields jumped.
- Bulls are hanging their hats on FSD subscriptions, battery ramp-up, and what China could bring. Bears, though, zero in on robotaxi execution issues—recent service checks in Texas turned up lengthy waits and inconsistent access.
Tesla shares took a double punch this session. Higher rates pressured pricey tech names, while the company’s robotaxi pitch faced yet another real-world trial, right out in the open. The sharp swing — up early, then tumbling hard — signaled investors slicing the AI premium, not bailing on autos as a whole.
This is significant: Tesla’s trading behavior doesn’t resemble that of a typical automaker. Its price-to-earnings ratio hovered near 398, putting its market cap at roughly $1.53 trillion. At levels like this, even modest shifts in interest-rate outlooks or a tweak in autonomy timelines can wipe out plenty of paper gains in a hurry.
Inflation kicked things off. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, April’s CPI was up 3.8% year-over-year, with core CPI—minus food and energy—logging a 2.8% gain. Treasury yields pushed higher following the release, Reuters noted. That lift in yields means investors want more return, so those far-off profits shrink in value. Tesla tends to illustrate this effect pretty clearly.
Execution turned out to be the second sticking point. Reuters reporters tried Tesla’s robotaxi service in Dallas, Houston, and Austin, and ran into lengthy waits, canceled rides, spotty coverage, and drop-offs that sometimes missed the mark. This is no mere detail for Tesla. Robotaxis sit at the heart of its pitch to investors: shifting past traditional vehicle margins and tapping higher-margin revenue from software and ride-hailing.
There’s tangible support for the bull case. Tesla logged 1.28 million active FSD subscriptions in Q1, and the company says it’s pushing harder on AI compute, battery materials, and new production lines. Then on Tuesday, Tesla announced plans to pour nearly $250 million extra into battery-cell production near Berlin, bumping the plant’s capacity target up to 18 GWh from 8 GWh.
The bearish case is hard to miss. Reuters counted roughly 50 Tesla robotaxis roaming Austin, far fewer than the 250-plus Waymo vehicles in the city. In 27% of ride checks, no Teslas showed up at all. Alphabet’s Waymo isn’t factored into Tesla’s valuation, but it’s the yardstick for regulators, customers, and investors alike.
Management’s latest comments didn’t put those worries to bed. Musk told investors Tesla is taking things slow with robotaxis, emphasizing the need to prevent injuries or fatalities; he added that “rigorous validation” remains the main bottleneck. Tesla’s capital spending for 2026 is now set to top $25 billion, with CFO Vaibhav Taneja describing this as a “very big capital-investment phase.” He flagged that free cash flow — what’s left after operations and capital spending — will stay negative through the rest of 2026. Reuters
Tesla didn’t get much of a break from the prediction markets. DeFi Rate’s tracker had Kalshi’s June Fed contract at a 97% chance rates stay put, and Polymarket pegged no June move at 98%, with the odds for zero Fed cuts in 2026 sitting at 62%. Traders looking at these numbers weren’t inclined to push pricey growth stocks up today.
Competition wasn’t pushing autos in one direction. GM picked up roughly 1.5%. Ford edged down 0.6%. Rivian lost just under 1%. Tesla, though, dropped more sharply—suggesting the market’s focus had shifted to companies exposed to rates, software bets, and self-driving timelines.
There was still a bit of a backstop from China in the background. Barron’s said Musk was slated to join President Donald Trump on a trip to China, which kept attention on the potential for Full Self-Driving to get the nod there. Yet Tesla hasn’t announced any imminent approval, and China’s crowded EV landscape means a software green light wouldn’t translate directly into new revenue.
The macro backdrop offered little help. Lazard’s Ronald Temple, chief market strategist, said “Fed easing appears to be off the table,” though he doesn’t see hikes coming either. It’s a tough spot for Tesla: rates aren’t rising, but the hoped-for cheaper capital isn’t materializing. Investopedia
Tesla’s stock sent a straightforward signal today. Investors are still pricing in a big AI and autonomy payoff, but expectations are shifting: now it’s about seeing shorter robotaxi waits, wider FSD greenlights, and big spending that signals real cash ahead, not just more expansion. Berlin’s a plus for supply, China might boost software. But the chart moved—the proof just couldn’t keep pace with the price, at least for now.