⬤ Tesla's stock has been a monster performer, climbing roughly 3,028% over ten years and trading around $480.80 recently. Some optimistic observers are framing 2026 as Tesla's "last chance to accumulate" moment—essentially the final opportunity to buy in before the company potentially becomes the world's most valuable business later this decade. That bullish outlook hinges on earnings growth kicking into higher gear, particularly as Tesla's long-promised Robotaxi program moves closer to reality.
⬤ The thinking goes that once Robotaxis start rolling out at scale, Tesla's earnings could shift into a sustained growth phase reminiscent of what happened starting mid-2019, when TSLA began its steep multi-year run that fundamentally changed how Wall Street valued the company. "If Robotaxi scales the way we expect, we're looking at an earnings inflection that mirrors 2019—maybe even stronger," one market watcher noted. The 10-year chart shows plenty of wild swings, but the overall trajectory has been sharply upward despite some brutal pullbacks along the way.
⬤ Talk of "Giga bids and TWAPs loading" suggests institutional players are ready to deploy serious capital using algorithmic buying strategies if TSLA dips in 2026. Right now, the stock sits between a 52-week low of $214.25 and a high of $498.83, sporting a hefty P/E ratio around 329 and averaging about 85 million shares traded daily. With a market cap pushing $1.6 trillion, Tesla remains one of the planet's biggest public companies by valuation.
Usman Salis
Usman Salis