Democrats have been calling the world's richest man "President Musk," referencing the influence he allegedly has over the president-elect.
Tesla finds the rules unfair because it believes it reports better data than other automakers, which makes it look like Tesla is responsible for an outsized number of crashes involving advanced driver-assistance systems, one of the sources said.
A reevaluation of which stocks and sectors have, will, or could potentially in the future see outsized gains due to the re-election of Donald Trump. Read what investors need to know.
Monday trading, as investors continued to buy into the idea that the electric-vehicle giant will be a big beneficiary of a Trump presidency. The prolific analyst Dan Ives of Wedbush boosted his stock price target for the next year by 29%,
Tesla, Inc.'s stock has surged recently after solid Q3 results and Donald Trump's re-election. Click here to read an analysis of TSLA stock now.
The Trump administration's rollbacks of EVs and emissions policies will be more far ranging than previously thought, according to a report.
The "President Musk" discourse continues, after the tech titan led the charge against a Republican-backed government funding bill.
Experts are split on whether that overlap in public opinion is a good or bad thing for Musk’s businesses or for Trump’s politics.
Tesla's swashbuckling rally isn't likely to cool anytime soon as loosing regulations will boost the EV maker's autonomous businesses just as chief executive Elon Musk's close relationship with President-elect Donald Trump paves
Tesla shares have skyrocketed since Trump's election. They hit a record on Dec. 17 after Mizuho Securities upgraded the electric-vehicle maker to outperform from neutral and more than doubled its price target to $515 a share from $230.
One company that should be at the top, or at least near the top, of any investor list of most-watched stocks has to be Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA). The U.S. EV maker continues to be one of the most volatile mega-cap names in the market,