Shares of Tesla began Tuesday’s session at $392.38, with a pair of distinct developments capturing market attention early in the trading week.
Tesla, Inc., TSLA
The first development: Tesla’s publicly available FSD safety metrics revealed that users have collectively driven 10.05 billion miles utilizing the Full Self-Driving driver assistance technology. The second development: Elon Musk finalized a $1.5 million settlement addressing allegations that he delayed disclosing his initial 5% ownership position in Twitter.
Premarket activity showed the stock gaining approximately 0.2% to reach $393.10, while both S&P 500 and Dow Jones futures climbed roughly 0.3%.
The achievement of 10 billion FSD miles represents a primarily symbolic benchmark. While it demonstrates substantial real-world deployment and usage of the technology, FSD continues to require active driver supervision. The ultimate objective—fully autonomous operation without human oversight—remains Musk’s stated goal for later this year.
The electric vehicle manufacturer has begun broadening its unsupervised Robotaxi operations throughout Texas, extending beyond Austin to include Dallas and Houston. While this represents tangible progress, industry observers note that Tesla continues to lag behind Waymo in the autonomous taxi market.
The Musk settlement with regulators stems from a disclosure violation dating back to his acquisition of what is now known as X, which closed in late 2022. He exceeded the required disclosure timeline by 11 days when accumulating his initial stake. The $1.5 million penalty appears modest given the circumstances and hasn’t meaningfully impacted investor sentiment toward Tesla.
Tesla’s latest quarterly earnings, published on April 23rd, revealed earnings per share of $0.41—exceeding the consensus projection of $0.39. Total revenue reached $22.39 billion, representing a 15.8% increase compared to the prior-year period, though it trailed the anticipated $22.96 billion.
The company also revealed over $500 million in revenue generated through transactions with Musk-affiliated entities including xAI and SpaceX, raising corporate governance questions among certain shareholders.
With a current market capitalization approaching $1.47 trillion, Tesla commands a price-to-earnings multiple near 360—an elevated valuation that presumes successful delivery on its artificial intelligence and autonomous vehicle initiatives.
Technical indicators show the 50-day moving average positioned at $383.09, while the 200-day moving average stands at $419.10. The stock’s 52-week trading range extends from a low of $271.00 to a peak of $498.83.
Analyst opinions remain divided across Wall Street. Among 41 analysts tracking the company, 19 recommend buying shares, 17 suggest holding current positions, and 5 advise selling. The consensus price target averages $398.42.
Recent activity includes Buy rating reaffirmations or initiations from Roth MKM and HSBC. Needham maintains a Hold stance. GLJ Research continues with a Sell rating.
Regarding insider transactions, director Kathleen Wilson-Thompson divested 26,409 shares on April 30th at an average price of $378.11, decreasing her holdings by 35.3%. CFO Vaibhav Taneja similarly reduced his position during March. Combined insider selling throughout the previous three months totaled 80,213 shares valued at roughly $30.85 million. Company insiders maintain ownership of 19.90% of outstanding shares.
Institutional ownership accounts for 66.20% of Tesla’s shares. Christine Messmer PC established a new stake during Q4, purchasing 1,522 shares worth approximately $684,000.
From a brand perspective, Tesla secured the top position in a recent U.S. brand loyalty study, while European vehicle registration figures indicated strengthening demand in Sweden, France, Denmark, and the Netherlands—though Spain experienced a substantial 47.3% year-over-year drop in April registrations.
The post Tesla (TSLA) Stock Hovers Near $393 Amid $30M Insider Sales and FSD Milestone appeared first on Blockonomi.


