Tesla stock (NASDAQ: TSLA) slipped over 2% on Thursday as renewed questions about valuation, margin pressure, and execution risks on autonomous driving spooked investors.
The downward cycle of Tesla stock began with Morgan Stanley’s recent downgrade to “Equal Weight,” which prompted traders to examine whether this marks the beginning of a larger retreat.
The stock faces resistance at key technical levels as analysts remain sharply divided on whether Tesla deserves its lofty $1.5 trillion market cap.
Tesla stock: Market reaction and what moved the tape
Tesla’s recent weakness reflects growing skepticism about the company’s ability to sustain profitability amid slowing global EV demand.
The stock is highly sensitive to both macro sentiment and company-specific catalysts.
On December 8, Morgan Stanley downgraded Tesla from “Buy” to “Hold,” slashing conviction on the auto business and reducing 2026 volume estimates by 10.5 percent.
That downgrade coincided with a 4 percent intraday tumble, signaling how reactive TSLA traders are to big-name analyst calls.
Volume patterns and options flow matter enormously in Tesla.
When the stock breaks below key support levels, dealers have flagged potential cascade selling as algorithmic strategies and stop orders kick in.
The broader tech sector’s recent struggles, triggered by Oracle’s disappointing earnings and AI spending concerns, also created headwinds.
The key technical threshold traders watch is the $405 to $410 support zone. A decisive close below that level would signal real weakness.
Above it, most strategists still view dips as “buy the fall” opportunities tied to long-term AI and robotics bets.
Near-term volume and institutional rebalancing will determine whether today’s slip extends into a 3 to 5 percent slide or reverses into a relief rally.
What analysts say
Wall Street remains fundamentally divided on Tesla.
On one side, bullish voices like Wedbush maintain a $600 price target, arguing that breakthroughs in full self-driving and Optimus robotics justify the premium valuation.
On the other hand, Morgan Stanley warns of a “choppy trading environment” and flagged execution risk around FSD deployment.
The consensus price target sits at $381.70, implying roughly 12% downside from current levels.
Traders hunting for near-term catalysts should watch Tesla’s next earnings call for margin trends and capex guidance.
Longer-term holders need to track FSD milestones, Optimus robot progress, and any regulatory green lights that could unlock the robotaxi vision.
If Musk’s AI roadmap falters, or if profitability deteriorates faster than expected, even the bulls will have to reconsider their targets.
A 2% dip is routine for a stock as volatile as Tesla.
But if selling accelerates on weak volume or a break of the $405 support zone, traders should assume a test of the $380 to $390 range is possible before buyers step in.
The next 12 months will test whether Tesla can deliver on its AI-driven growth story or whether the valuation finally corrects to reflect auto industry realities.
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