Tesla stock slipped on Tuesday after Bank of America said it sees shares fairly priced, with some risk to the downside.
Tesla shares dropped Tuesday as federal regulators said they’re looking into crashes related to the company's automated vehicle summoning features and analysts at Bank of America downgraded the stock.
It's been another week, and Bank of America analysts are mixed on Tesla (TSLA) following a major development with a novel technology. The same BofA analysts delivered new insights following CES, and Citibank analysts gave some positive insight about Stellantis.
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Come on now. Tesla deserves a bull rating. It always has deserved a bull rating. A Bull-S rating.Tesla and Musk both deserve Bull-S ratings. And no, "S" does not mean Sell! Although if you own it you should sell it.
Tesla (TSLA) shares are under pressure after Bank of America analysts downgraded the stock to Neutral from Buy, citing valuation concerns. Despite the downgrade, analysts lifted their price target to $490 from $400.
Tesla Inc.’s stock slipped 0.9% Tuesday, after Bank of America downgraded the stock to neutral from buy, arguing that it already reflects the long-term potential of such items as robotaxi and energy storage,
Shares of electric vehicle pioneer Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) fell 3.3% in the morning session after Bank of America analyst John Murphy downgraded the stock's rating from Buy to Hold, citing "execution risk.
Tesla (TSLA) stock is retreating 4% today after the federal government announced a new probe of the firm. Additionally, Bank of America downgraded the shares to Neutral from Buy today.
The Zacks Research Daily presents the best research output of our analyst team. Today's Research Daily features new research reports on 16 major stocks, including Tesla, Inc. (TSLA), Bank of ...
U.S. stock indexes are rallying toward the close of their best week in two months. The S&P 500 rose 1.1% Friday.
The Austin-based automaker has collected a whopping $11 billion from the sale of regulatory credits to other automakers attempting to comply with emissions targets. But, as Axios reports, that income could be threatened by the approach Trump may take on Biden-era regulations.