Tesla stock bounced back Thursday morning after getting caught in Wednesday’s AI sector selloff. Shares rose 1.4% to $473.65 in early trading.
Tesla, Inc., TSLA
The recovery comes after a rough Wednesday. Tesla dropped 4.6% as AI-related stocks tumbled across the board.
Wednesday’s selloff happened right after Tesla hit a record high. Shares traded at $495.28 for the first time ever earlier that day.
The decline was part of a broader AI sector retreat. Nvidia fell 3.8% and GE Vernova plunged 10.5%.
The selloff was triggered by news that Mythic raised $125 million. The AI chip startup aims to solve what it calls “the biggest problem of AI—its insatiable, ruinous energy consumption.”
Lower energy consumption would actually benefit Tesla. The company uses AI computing for its self-driving technology and robotics efforts.
But investors didn’t stop to consider the details. Most AI-related stocks fell regardless of whether the news was good or bad for them.
Tuesday’s record high capped a recovery from a turbulent first half of 2025. The stock had plunged more than 50% by mid-April from its December 2024 peak.
CEO Elon Musk’s government work with the Trump administration sparked consumer backlash. Investors worried he was distracted from running Tesla.
The stock regained momentum when Musk stepped back from White House duties. Shares have been climbing ever since.
Tesla’s shift toward AI and robotics has driven the turnaround. Musk announced Tesla began testing unoccupied self-driving cars in Austin this week. That’s a major step toward launching the robotaxi service.
The company started its robotaxi pilot in Austin in June. It expanded to San Francisco in July.
Musk plans to enter Phoenix and Las Vegas next year. He’s banking on autonomous vehicles to transform Tesla’s business.
The company unveiled its Robovan and Cybercab in late 2024. Musk predicted fully autonomous Teslas would operate in Texas and California by the end of 2025.
He also showcased the Optimus humanoid robot. Musk called it “the biggest product ever.”
Wedbush analyst Dan Ives thinks 2026 will be a “game changer” for Tesla. He expects Cybercab volume production to begin by May.
Ives predicts federal regulators will help accelerate the robotaxi rollout. He believes Tesla stock could hit $800 by the end of next year, up more than 60% from current levels.
Most Wall Street analysts are more cautious. The average price target sits below $400, suggesting potential downside.
The autonomous technology optimism has offset weak EV sales. Sales jumped to a record last quarter as buyers rushed to claim federal tax credits before they expired.
But Tesla is expected to deliver fewer cars this year than in 2024. First and second quarter deliveries dropped sharply.
Shareholders approved a compensation plan for Musk last month valued at up to $1 trillion. That eased concerns about his commitment to Tesla given his other ventures.
Despite the Wednesday selloff, Tesla stock remains up 16% year to date. S&P 500 and Dow Jones futures were up 0.5% and 0.2% respectively on Thursday morning.
The post Tesla (TSLA) Stock: All-Time High Followed by AI Selloff on Wednesday – What’s Next? appeared first on CoinCentral.


