Musk pins Tesla's comeback on robotaxis after retreat from feud
Musk said Tesla would start the new self-driving car service in Austin as soon as Jun 22, as part of the electric vehicles (EV) maker's big bet on artificial intelligence and autonomous driving.
While Tesla gave the city an outline of its tentative plans, the company had not disclosed a launch date – either publicly or directly to Austin officials – until late on Tuesday (Jun 10), when Musk warned the service's debut could shift because it was 'super paranoid about safety.' The proclamation came as part of an all-night series of social media messages by Musk, which included a near-apology that 'I regret some of my posts' about the president, which 'went too far.'
The comments helped push shares up about 3 per cent Wednesday by investors who have been urging Musk to refocus on his business empire.
The billionaire has said the rollout would start slowly, with 10 to 20 vehicles, and a testing area verified by Bloomberg News suggests the initial contours of the debut resemble more of a souped-up demo than a full-fledged launch.
That may not matter to Tesla's biggest fans, or the stock price. Investors generally have been willing to give Musk the benefit of the doubt in the short term as they believe in his long-term vision.
BT in your inbox
Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
Sign Up
Sign Up
For the moment, Tesla sales are tumbling around the world, its stock is down around 20 per cent this year and analysts have lowered their expectations for the company's performance. While Musk tries to undo some of the damage from his meltdown with Trump, the immediate impact to Tesla's shares and Musk's own wealth shows just how delicate the whole balance is. The government has outsized influence over his businesses, from billion-dollar contracts to the regulatory environment for autonomous vehicles and Tesla's robotaxi network.
'He needs to dial down the rhetoric and the drama and get back to the business of Optimus and robotaxi and Full Self Driving,' Nancy Tengler, chief executive officer and chief investment officer of Laffer Tengler Investments, told Bloomberg Television. 'That is what people own the stock for – and for his brilliance and genius of course – but not for the histrionics.'
Musk has promised to establish a ride-hailing network that is part 'Airbnb, part Uber.' The company wants the fleet to built on its Full Self-Driving technology and eventually feature both purpose-built Cybercabs without pedals or steering wheels, as well as Teslas owned by the company and individual drivers. Musk predicts hundreds of thousands of the vehicles on the road by late 2026. The robotaxi launch is the first step in showing investors he can deliver.
Tesla will be the fourth robotaxi service to launch in Austin in the past several years. While Tesla can operate its standard consumer models in Texas with no driver, it needs federal exemptions to use the Cybercab in its fleet. In other states, including California, Tesla faces a patchwork of regulations.
Representatives for Tesla and Musk did not respond to requests for comment.
Testing grounds
There have been signs of the company's preparation in Austin. Model Y vehicles with manufacturer's plates have become a frequent sight around town in the south and southeast portions of the city that are studded with residential neighborhoods and retail shopping centers and a few minutes drive from downtown. In some cases, the vehicles drive around in what appear to be circular routes.
The initial operation area will likely cover only a few square miles, according to a person familiar with the plan who was not authorised to speak publicly on it. The zone could change before launch or be amended quickly after the service begins.
The rules governing driverless vehicles in Texas are notably light. While rideshare companies with human drivers must obtain a license to operate in Texas, a legal loophole means robotaxis like those operated by Tesla do not need the same approvals, according to the Texas Department of Licensing and Registration. That makes the state a popular choice for companies in the early stages of autonomous service.
Waymo, the driverless-rideshare business owned by Google parent Alphabet, currently has about 100 robotaxis in Austin in partnership with Uber and plans to ramp up to hundreds over time. Volkswagen ADMT and Amazon's Zoox are testing their vehicles there. A number of autonomous trucking companies are also testing elsewhere in the state.
Tesla has embraced a different approach to autonomy, favoring a camera-only system rather than a combination of lidar, radar and pre-mapping that competitors use. Musk has long claimed such an approach will allow the company to scale up sooner than rivals including Waymo, which he considers too expensive.
According to some estimates, Tesla's system of sensors costs about US$400 per vehicle; Waymo's fleet, which totals 1,500 vehicles in California, Arizona and Texas, runs roughly US$12,650 per car. Critics have said Tesla's vision-only system is riskier as it's more limited in certain conditions with less visibility, such as sun glare, fog or dust.
Regardless of the vehicles' specifications, autonomous vehicle testing in Austin and elsewhere has brought challenges. General Motors' now-defunct Cruise dragged a person along a street in San Francisco in a gruesome incident that left the pedestrian in critical condition. Driverless rideshare cars have caused viral traffic jams in Austin and last week, Waymo drove into a flooded area following a storm.
'Safety is our highest priority at Waymo, both for people who choose to ride with us and those with whom we share the streets. We remain committed to improving road safety through our ongoing learnings and experience,' a Waymo spokesperson said.
In preparation for its launch, Tesla has been in touch with Austin city officials and first responders to discuss safety expectations, according to emails seen by Bloomberg News that date back to at least May 2024. Tesla has said robotaxis will be remotely monitored initially.
But several key aspects of Tesla's plan are yet to be finalised with the city's autonomous vehicle working group, which communicates with AV companies operating in Austin. Tesla has only shown officials a draft of an expected first responder guide, and an emergency training is still outstanding, according to Andre Jordan, division chief of homeland security and special operations for the Austin Fire Department, and a member of the city's working group.
'Autonomous vehicles are required to follow the law, but what happens when the law and directions of first responders conflict? It's a complicated world,' said Jordan.
Brand damage
It is also a complicated moment for Musk to pitch Tesla as a trusted brand to take passengers, many of whom aren't accustomed to riding in self-driving cars, where they need to go. Thanks to months wading through the political fracas in Washington, the billionaire and his cars have never been more polarising.
Although Musk has sought to dial down the hostility with the president, the billionaire's public spat with Trump threatens to alienate even more customers.
'Tesla at this moment is a brand with all sorts of mixed associations,' said Tim Calkins, a marketing professor at Northwestern University's Kellogg School of Management. 'If people have negative feelings about Elon Musk and they spill onto robotaxi, I don't think they'll be eager to take a ride. There's lots of alternatives.'
Driverless vehicles require an extra element of trust and critics will be ready to amplify any mishaps, said Mike Paul, president of crisis consultancy Reputation Doctor LLC.
'When you're starting from a deficit currently, from a trust in branding perspective, with all things Elon,' Paul said, 'it's going to be very difficult to show success.'
Musk has been building expectations for this launch for years. While some investors are willing to lend him some leniency on timing and the exact details, many want concrete signs of progress.
Baird analyst Ben Kallo downgraded Tesla to neutral, citing, in part, overhyped expectations from Musk around the robotaxi launch and intensifying competition in the space. Kallo also said that Musk's deteriorating relationship with Trump has led to more uncertainty.
'The valuation has gotten ahead of itself around the robotaxi,' Kallo told Bloomberg Television. 'I do think the rollout will take longer. At first it will require more people, so people in control centers making sure that the cars do not get into accidents something like that.'
For that reason, Kallo said there will likely be some short-term pain. 'Rolling this out will be very difficult.' BLOOMBERG
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNA
2 hours ago
- CNA
Musk's SpaceX, others win US court challenge to labor board's structure
A U.S. appeals court on Tuesday agreed with Elon Musk's SpaceX and two other companies that the U.S. National Labor Relations Board's structure is likely unlawful and blocked the agency from pursuing cases against them. The ruling by the New Orleans-based 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals is the first by an appeals court to find that a law shielding NLRB administrative judges and the board's five members from being removed at will by the president is likely illegal. The 5th Circuit on Tuesday said the protections from removal prevent the president from exercising his power to control the executive branch. "Because the executive power remains solely vested in the President, those who exercise it on his behalf must remain subject to his oversight," wrote Circuit Judge Don Willett, an appointee of Republican President Donald Trump. A series of similar cases challenging the board's structure are pending, and the Trump administration is making the same arguments after the president fired a Democratic member of the board in January and she sued to get her job back. The 5th Circuit upheld decisions by three judges in Texas that blocked NLRB cases alleging illegal labor practices by SpaceX, pipeline operator Energy Transfer, and Aunt Bertha, which operates a social services search engine, pending the outcome of their lawsuits. "The Employers have made their case and should not have to choose between compliance and constitutionality," wrote Willett. The board and the companies did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Musk was a top adviser to Trump, spearheading an effort to drastically shrink the federal workforce and slash government spending, until the two men had a public falling out in May. SpaceX has a separate pending lawsuit against the NLRB seeking to block a different board case. The NLRB is the only federal agency that hears private-sector labor disputes. The agency's general counsel can issue complaints against employers or unions that are heard by administrative judges, whose decisions can be appealed to the board. The five-member board has been paralyzed and unable to issue decisions since Trump in January fired Member Gwynne Wilcox. The NLRB was designed by the U.S. Congress to be independent from the White House, and before Wilcox no board member had ever been removed by the president.


CNA
11 hours ago
- CNA
Xiaomi's second-quarter revenue up 30.5%, boosted by smartphones
BEIJING :A rise in sales of smartphones, especially in Southeast Asia, helped to boost Xiaomi's second-quarter revenue by 30.5 per cent, the smartphone and EV company said on Tuesday. Revenue for the quarter ended June 30 was 116 billion yuan ($16.16 billion), beating the 114.7 billion yuan average of 15 analyst estimates compiled by LSEG. Adjusted net profit rose 75.4 per cent year-on-year to 10.8 billion yuan, exceeding the average estimate of 10.1 billion yuan, according to LSEG data. The world's third-largest smartphone maker became the bestselling smartphone brand in Southeast Asia in the second quarter and took second place by shipments in Europe, it said. Its EV business, meanwhile, generated 20.6 billion yuan in revenue during the second quarter, up from 18.1 billion during the first quarter. It delivered 81,302 EVs in the June quarter, compared with deliveries of 75,869 SU7 cars in January-March. Its second EV model YU7 was launched in late June, with the deliveries only beginning last month, meaning it has yet to be reflected in results. Its EV, AI and other new initiatives reported a total net loss of 0.3 billion yuan in the June quarter, narrowing from a loss of 0.5 billion in the first quarter. Hong Kong-listed shares in Xiaomi, which also makes home appliances, closed down 1.2 per cent at 52.4 Hong Kong dollars. The stock has risen 52 per cent so far this year.
Business Times
12 hours ago
- Business Times
Xiaomi's revenue rises 31% after second EV excites consumers
[HONG KONG] Xiaomi's quarterly revenue rose a slightly better-than-anticipated 31 per cent after the successful launch of its second electric vehicle helped counter slowing demand for smartphones. Revenue climbed to 116 billion yuan (S$20.7 billion), versus the average analyst estimate of about 115 billion yuan. Net income roughly doubled to 11.9 billion yuan. Xiaomi delivered 81,302 cars in the second quarter, taking the total to more than 157,000 over the first half – on track to surpass 2024's haul. Strong demand for the YU7 sport utility vehicle, which co-founder Lei Jun released at the end of June, is propelling Xiaomi's US$10 billion gamble on a fast-growing but crowded EV arena. The company aims to take on Tesla and BYD and become one of the world's top five carmakers, despite a production crunch that's testing its ability to scale up. Wait times for the SUV have stretched to more than a year. Lei said at an investor meeting in June that the carmaking venture is expected to turn profitable in the second half of this year. Xiaomi has gained some US$120 billion of market value over the past year, galvanised by a drive into EVs that's gained momentum against much larger and more experienced rivals. The company seems to have shaken off a fatal accident involving one of its SU7 sedans in March, which had its Autopilot turned on. The crash prompted regulators to rein in the deployment of advanced driver assistance technology. The Chinese government also intervened in June to try to stop a long-running price war that has squeezed margins all along the auto supply chain. Xiaomi has avoided getting embroiled in the discounting as demand for its vehicles remains high. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up Still, the stock is now trading at more expensive valuations than BYD as well as global smartphone rival Samsung Electronics 'Revenue from its Smart EV and other new-initiatives segment might have gained 11 per cent sequentially, supported by continued ramp-up in production capacity. The Internet of things division could have delivered 30 to 40 per cent sales growth on share gains in white goods and government subsidies,' said Steven Tseng and Sean Chen, analysts at Bloomberg Intelligence. 'However handset sales growth might have slowed to a mid-single-digit percentage. Gross margin could have expanded year over year to 22.5 per cent, driven by greater scale in the EV business and an improved Internet of things product mix. However, gross margin may have dipped slightly vs. 1Q due to promotional sales and rising input costs in the smartphone segment.' Xiaomi is grappling with a slowdown in its core business and sluggish consumer spending. Xiaomi along with rivals Apple and Huawei Technologies offered steep discounts over the big June shopping festival in an attempt to lure shoppers, pressuring margins. AI and chip design is another venture where Xiaomi is ramping up resources. The Beijing-based firm unveiled a three-nanometre chip called the Xring O1 chip, designed to power devices including the Tablet 7 Ultra. Lei said the company would invest US$7 billion this decade into its semiconductor. BLOOMBERG