Tesla

Tesla stock tumbles after Elon Musk's unimpressive robotaxi event

NBC Universal, Inc. Shares in Tesla plunged about 6% at closing Friday after Elon Musk and his dancing robots failed to impress with the electric vehicle company’s robotaxi unveiling.

Shares in Tesla plunged about 6% in premarket Friday then continued to fall during trading after Elon Musk and his dancing robots failed to impress with the electric vehicle company's robotaxi unveiling.

As of 12:10 p.m. ET Friday, Tesla shares had fallen 7.7%.

Musk announced Thursday that anyone will be able to buy a Tesla robotaxi for $30,000 two years from now, and current Tesla vehicles will be able to drive themselves with no one in it.

Shares in Tesla plunged about 6% in premarket Friday after Elon Musk and his dancing robots failed to impress with the electric vehicle company's robotaxi unveiling.

Shares in Tesla Inc. (Nasdaq: TSLA) closed Thursday at $238.77. The stock opened Friday at $220.13 and went as low as $214.38 in early morning trading.

Musk said the company hopes to be producing the Cybercab before 2027, but offered no details on where the cars will be manufactured, according to CNBC's report Friday.

One of Tesla's largest factories is in Fremont, California, where it produces hundreds of thousands of vehicles each year.

Musk also said he expects Tesla to have "unsupervised FSD (full self-driving)" up and running in Texas and California next year in the company's Model 3 and Model Y electric vehicles, CNBC reported.

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