Tesla (TSLA) shares are set to snap a seven-session losing streak, with the stock up 3.8% at $454.65 in afternoon trading on Monday
Elon Musk-led electric vehicle manufacturer lost nearly 9.8% over the preceding seven sessions. TSLA shares were nearly flat over the past month. The stock closed 2.59% lower at $438.07 on Friday.
The stock has gained nearly 8.59% over the past year, underperforming the broader S&P 500 Index, which gained 17% over the same period.
Tesla’s (TSLA) China factory shipments fell again in 2025, underscoring mounting pressure on the Elon Musk-led automaker as it grapples with slowing global demand.
The Austin-based carmaker shipped 851,732 vehicles from its Shanghai plant last year, down 7% year-over-year, according to preliminary data released Monday by the China Passenger Car Association (CPCA).
December deliveries totaled 97,171 vehicles, marking just the fourth month in 2025 to show a year-over-year increase.
Looking at Seeking Alpha’s Quant Rating, TSLA has a Hold rating with a score of 3.35 out of 5. The company received an A+ for profitability, an A- for momentum, but an F for valuation.
Turning to the Wall Street community, 19 out of 46 analysts gave TSLA a Buy or higher. 17 analysts have given the stock a Hold recommendation, while 10 rate it as a Sell or lower.
Seeking Alpha analysts are also cautious and see the stock as a Hold.
Seeking Alpha analyst Bill Maurer rated the stock as Sell, saying that multiple factors contributed to TSLA missing its ambitious sales growth targets for the year, highlighting operational and market headwinds.
Maurer added that Tesla’s robo-taxi network expansion remains well behind Elon Musk’s prior growth projections.