Shares of Tesla (TSLA) finished Thursday’s session at $399.15, marking a 4.6% increase, coinciding with the official closure of SpaceX’s initial public offering order book. The broader S&P 500 index rose 1.75% while the Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 1.86% during the same trading period.
Tesla, Inc., TSLA
This upward movement followed a challenging period for the stock. Throughout the five trading days preceding Thursday, Tesla shares declined nearly 10%, prompting speculation that retail shareholders were liquidating positions to generate capital for SpaceX’s public offering.
The SpaceX IPO stands as a historic market event — generating approximately $75 billion in proceeds, with roughly 30% designated for retail participation. This retail allocation significantly exceeds conventional IPO standards and attracted considerable attention considering the overlap between Tesla’s retail investor base and Elon Musk supporters.
However, a closer examination reveals the direct impact on Tesla shares may be overstated. The retail component of the SpaceX capital raise represents approximately 2% of Tesla’s entire market capitalization. Furthermore, not all invested capital necessarily originated from TSLA liquidations.
Broader market dynamics also contributed to the decline. The Nasdaq Composite fell roughly 6% during the corresponding week. Considering Tesla’s beta coefficient of 1.80, a 10% to 12% correction aligns with historical performance patterns during market downturns of similar magnitude.
The analyst community’s perspective has evolved recently. JPMorgan raised Tesla from underweight to neutral on June 5th while dramatically increasing its price objective from $145 to $475. Evercore similarly upgraded the stock to outperform on the identical date.
Not all analysts share this optimism. Truist lowered its target from $438 to $400 while maintaining a Hold recommendation. Jefferies preserved its neutral stance. Oppenheimer analyst Colin Rusch continues with a Hold rating without specifying a price target, though he highlighted possible synergies between Tesla and SpaceX regarding physical AI applications and stationary energy storage.
The Wall Street consensus among 44 covering analysts remains at Hold, with an average price objective of $404.37. The breakdown includes twenty-two Buy recommendations, seventeen Hold ratings, and five Sell opinions.
Nuveen decreased its Tesla allocation by 2.6% during the fourth quarter, divesting 350,541 shares to maintain 13.19 million units, representing approximately $5.93 billion in value. Notwithstanding this reduction, Tesla continues as Nuveen’s 9th largest holding.
Vanguard increased its position by 6.5 million shares in Q4, elevating its total stake to 258.9 million units. Norges Bank established a new position valued at roughly $17.1 billion. Capital World increased its ownership by 5.8% during the third quarter. Collectively, institutional investors control 66.2% of the company’s shares.
Regarding insider transactions, Director Kathleen Wilson-Thompson divested 26,409 shares at $378.11 on April 30th, decreasing her ownership by 35.3%. CFO Vaibhav Taneja sold 3,000 units at $450 on May 13th to satisfy tax liabilities associated with equity award vesting.
Tesla’s most recent quarterly earnings release on April 23rd showed earnings per share of $0.41 — marginally exceeding the $0.39 Wall Street estimate. Quarterly revenue totaled $22.39 billion, representing a 15.8% year-over-year increase, though falling slightly short of analyst projections of $22.96 billion.
The stock’s 12-month price range extends from $288.77 to $498.83. Tesla’s 50-day moving average stands at $397.84, while the 200-day moving average registers at $416.08.
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