Tesla, robotaxi and Elon Musk
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Tesla and its CEO Elon Musk are walking an increasingly difficult tightrope as the company navigates declining electric vehicle sales and an autonomous driving business that has yet to get off the ground.
Tesla, under CEO Elon Musk, is grappling with declining electric vehicle sales and slow progress in autonomous driving. Despite ambitious plans to launch robotaxi services across multiple states, regulatory approvals remain a significant hurdle.
Tesla Inc. (TSLA) reported a transformative Q2 2025, highlighted by the official launch of its Robotaxi service in Austin and expanding efforts in AI and robotics, even as core automotive revenues declined. The quarter signaled a strategic pivot from Tesla’s EV roots toward a broader vision in autonomy, software, and energy services.
Tesla Inc. is in early talks with officials in Nevada to establish autonomous vehicle operations in the state as the automaker plans an expansion of its recently introduced robotaxi service.
Survey data shared exclusively with WIRED suggests that Tesla’s newest autonomous driving technology has freaked out some consumers.
Elon Musk warns about a "rough" few quarters and shares updates on robotaxis and the "more affordable" Tesla model.
Wall Street looks bearish on Tesla at first glance. And it is -- at least on average. But plenty of analysts and everyday investors remain extremely bullish.
In two weeks, the Tesla Austin robotaxi area will expand again. It will likely cover the 300 square miles of the city of Austin. Tesla also said they will
Waymo’s robotaxis are fully driverless and expanding fast, while Tesla’s service is still limited and invite-only. The gap is bigger than you think.