Tesla, Inc. (TSLA) closed Friday’s session at $458.96, up 2.71%, as the stock edged just above an early technical entry point.
Tesla, Inc., TSLA
Shares briefly touched an intraday high of $463.01 before pulling back slightly into the close. The move comes as investors weigh near-term technical signals against renewed focus on Tesla’s autonomous driving ambitions, driven by CEO Elon Musk’s latest self-imposed deadline.
The stock’s close cleared the Dec. 5 high of $458.87, a level that traders often view as an early entry signal. After-hours trading showed modest pressure, with TSLA slipping to $456.22. Even so, the price action suggests Tesla may be forming a fresh consolidation, with a possible buy point near $474.07 on the daily chart if momentum holds.
Tesla ended the week up less than 1%, yet the chart shows constructive behavior. Earlier in the week, the stock bounced off its 50-day moving average, a level closely followed by growth investors. In December alone, TSLA has climbed about 6.4%, signaling renewed interest after a choppy stretch.
The broader EV space also drew attention, with Rivian shares surging sharply following its Autonomy & AI Day. While Rivian’s rally highlighted growing competition and innovation across the sector, Tesla remains the benchmark for autonomy expectations in public markets.
A major catalyst behind recent TSLA interest is Musk’s renewed push on self-driving. Earlier this week, he doubled down on plans to remove “safety monitors” from Model Y robotaxis operating in Austin, Texas, by the end of 2025. He later compressed expectations by setting a three-week window for removing monitors from the Austin ride-hailing service.
Safety monitors currently sit in the front passenger seat during Austin rides, while Tesla employees occupy the driver’s seat in Bay Area robotaxi trials. Musk’s comments raise the stakes, given his long history of optimistic timelines around full self-driving. This time, the deadline is much closer, putting execution under sharper scrutiny.
Beyond Austin, Tesla could expand its robotaxi service to Phoenix before the end of 2025. That would give the company autonomous ride-hailing coverage in three regions: Austin, the Bay Area, and Phoenix. Musk previously suggested the service could reach eight major cities by year-end and eventually serve half the U.S. population, though those projections have since been scaled back.
Analysts view progress on autonomy as a potential catalyst for TSLA shares, especially if Tesla demonstrates meaningful operational milestones rather than promises. Success in removing safety monitors without regulatory or safety setbacks would mark a notable step toward commercial-scale autonomy.
From a longer-term perspective, Tesla’s stock performance still stands out. As of December 12, 2025, TSLA is up 13.65% year to date, slightly trailing the S&P 500’s 16.08% gain. Over one year, Tesla has returned 9.77%, also modestly below the index.
The longer horizon tells a different story. Over three years, TSLA has delivered a 173.48% return, far exceeding the S&P 500’s 71.09%. Over five years, Tesla’s gain of 125.72% also tops the benchmark’s 86.37%, underscoring its strength as a long-term growth stock despite periods of volatility.
With TSLA hovering near key technical levels, attention now shifts to whether momentum can carry the stock toward the 474 area. At the same time, Musk’s robotaxi deadline introduces both opportunity and risk. For investors, the coming weeks may test whether Tesla’s autonomy narrative can translate into concrete progress, shaping the next leg for the stock.
The post Tesla, Inc. (TSLA) Stock: Early Entry Forms as Robotaxi Deadline Raises Autonomy Stakes appeared first on CoinCentral.

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