Tesla shares set to wrap strong May as Elon Musk ends time with Trump’s DOGE

Tesla shares set to wrap strong May as Elon Musk ends time with Trump’s DOGE


Elon Musk is interviewed on CNBC from the Tesla headquarters in Texas.

CNBC

Shares of the Elon Musk-led automaker Tesla have rallied in May despite recent poor car sales numbers for the company in China and Europe, as the billionaire CEO promised to focus more on his businesses than politics.

Tesla shares are on track for an increase of more than 20% for the month.

The stock is still down about 12% for the year. Apple is down about 21% year-to-date, the worst of all the megacaps.

The bounceback in May comes as President Donald Trump marks the end of Musk’s time as a “special government employee” at the helm of the Department of Government Efficiency.

“This will be his last day, but not really, because he will, always, be with us, helping all the way,” Trump wrote on Truth Social. “Elon is terrific!”

Musk said on the most recent Tesla earnings call that his time spent running DOGE would drop significantly by the end of May, but that he plans to spend a “day or two per week” on government work until the end of Trump’s term.

Musk also planned to keep his office at the White House.

“I expect to remain a friend and an advisor, and certainly, if there’s anything the president wants me to do, I’m at the president’s service,” the Tesla CEO said at a press event in the Oval Office on Friday.

Stock Chart IconStock chart icon

hide content

Tesla year to date stock chart

The New York Times reported Friday that while Musk was campaigning for Trump last year, he had been taking drugs “well beyond occasional use” and was “facing an increasingly turbulent family life.”

The Times noted it was unclear if that habit carried over to his time in the White House, when he was also juggling Tesla and the other companies in his business empire — including SpaceX and X owner xAI, his artificial intelligence company.

Tesla’s European sales dropped by half, year-over-year for April.

Tesla sales in China, another massive market for battery electric vehicles, were down by about 25% year over year in the first eight weeks of the current quarter.

The carmaker has faced protests in reaction to Musk’s ties with Trump, and his endorsement of Germany’s far-right extremist party AfD.

Pension fund leaders recently called out Tesla’s board in a letter, demanding that they rein in Musk, and require him to work a minimum of 40 hours a week on Tesla to fix what they called the current “crisis.”

Musk and Tesla have tried to focus investors’ attention on the company’s prospects in autonomous vehicle tech, humanoid robotics and artificial intelligence.

Bloomberg reported this week that Tesla plans to launch its long-delayed and much anticipated autonomous vehicle ride-hailing service in Austin, Texas, on June 12th.

Tesla has not confirmed that start date, but has been promising to launch a robotaxi ride-hailing service in Austin before the end of June.

Musk told CNBC’s David Faber in a recent interview that Tesla would start with a small fleet of Model Y Tesla vehicles equipped with the company’s newest, Unsupervised Full Self Driving hardware and software.

Musk has been promising investors a robotaxi vehicle for years, and the company has ceded ground to Waymo in the U.S. The Alphabet-owned robotaxi venture recently surpassed 10 million paid, driverless ridehailing trips.

Shares of Tesla have also benefitted from the company’s stronger position, relative to other U.S. automakers when it comes to weathering tariffs.

Tesla operates two massive vehicle assembly plants domestically, one in Fremont, California and another in Austin, Texas, and has more North American-made parts in its cars than most of its competitors.



Source

China’s DeepSeek launches next-gen AI model. Here’s what makes it different
World

China’s DeepSeek launches next-gen AI model. Here’s what makes it different

Anna Barclay | Getty Images News | Getty Images Chinese startup DeepSeek’s latest experimental model promises to increase efficiency and improve AI’s ability to handle a lot of information at a fraction of the cost, but questions remain over how effective and safe the architecture is.   DeepSeek sent Silicon Valley into a frenzy when […]

Read More
UK PM Starmer prepares for critical address — and much is riding on what he says
World

UK PM Starmer prepares for critical address — and much is riding on what he says

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer touches his glasses during a press conference with U.S. President Donald Trump (not pictured) at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., Feb. 27, 2025.  Brian Snyder | Reuters Seldom, if ever, can a British prime minister, barely a year into office and sitting on an enormous parliamentary majority, have […]

Read More
European markets open lower as traders keep an eye on tariffs, U.S. political deadlock
World

European markets open lower as traders keep an eye on tariffs, U.S. political deadlock

A specialist trader works on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., Sept. 15, 2025. Brendan McDermid | Reuters LONDON — European stocks opened lower on Tuesday as investors kept an eye on U.S. President Donald Trump’s trade tariffs and more political deadlock in the U.S. European markets […]

Read More