Out-of-this-world reasons for Elon Musk’s SpaceX deal
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Wall Street analysts called Tesla's pivot toward AI and robotics and away from automobiles the most important takeaway from its latest earnings report.
The four Wall Street firms are currently selling existing shares valuing the company at $800 billion, according to reports.
By Echo Wang and Prakhar Srivastava Jan 22 (Reuters) - Elon Musk's space startup SpaceX is lining up four Wall Street banks for leading roles on a potential initial public offering that could rank among the largest market debuts ever,
Andreessen Horowitz general partner Katherine Boyle discusses Elon Musk’s impact on a new generation of engineers.
For Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) and its investors, the times are changing rapidly. Although Tesla started out as an electric vehicle (EV) manufacturer first and foremost, CEO Elon Musk now seems to be focused on artificial intelligence (AI) and Optimus robots.
Tesla last night reported its latest financial results, which included the addition of a line item about how many active subscriptions it has for its "FSD" self-driving software product.
SpaceX filed a plan to launch one million satellites to provide AI data centers in space. Experts are not impressed.
After soaring in 2023 and 2024, shares of Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) were battered throughout the first half of 2025. The largest U.S. EV-maker staged a comeback in the second half of the year and finishing with a roughly 11% gain.