Elon Musk has commented on Tesla’s massive price drop on Monday, emphasizing that he doesn’t think it’s as big of a concern as it’s being made out to be.
After Tesla’s share price fell 15.4 percent on Monday to close at $222.15, representing the largest single-day drop since 2020, Musk responded to a post on X highlighting some of the company’s other big single-day drops. In the response, Musk said that “It will be fine long-term,” echoing others in highlighting that Tesla has had other large single-day drops before.
As a result of the drop, Tesla’s stock price is currently down about 50 percent from its all-time high in December 2024. The previous largest stock drop in a single day occurred in September 2020, when the stock price fell 21.1 percent to $110.
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Although Tesla has been facing mass protests and vandalism at its stores and against its vehicles in recent weeks, some analysts have also defended the company’s potential for upside, especially as robotaxis and Unsupervised Full Self-Driving (FSD) are expected to go out later this year.
On Tuesday, billionaire investor Ron Baron defended Tesla’s stock in an interview with CNBC, noting that he would keep holding onto his personal shares, even though his firm Baron Capital trimmed some Tesla stock last month due to its position becoming too large. Baron went on to say that Tesla will be the last position he would trim in his portfolio.
“I’m the last in, I’ll be the last out,” Baron said. “So I won’t sell a single share personally until I sell all the shares for clients, and that’s what I’ve done.”
Similarly, Morgan Stanley analyst Adam Jonas said that he expects Tesla’s share price to rebound as much as 93 percent within the next year, with the firm setting a $430 price target for the stock. Ark Invest, the firm run by Tesla bull Cathie Wood, also loaded up on additional Tesla stock amidst the price drop, adding more than $20 million worth of shares on Monday.
Alternatively, some have highlighted Musk’s recent political endeavors as extremely bearish, emphasizing beliefs that the stock’s bubble is now bursting. Last week for example, Swedish billionaire and hedge fund manager Christer Gardell said that he thought Tesla’s valuation could drop by as much as 95 percent, calling Musk’s recent efforts a “circus” and saying the company’s valuation was “incomprehensible.”
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