Shares of electric vehicle maker Tesla tumbled Friday after the company’s long-awaited robotaxi event — where CEO Elon Musk unveiled the firm’s Cybercab self-driving concept car — failed to impress investors.
Tesla stock was down 5.7% as of 5:20 a.m. ET in premarket trading on Friday.
Musk revealed Tesla’s Cybercab concept vehicle — a low, silver two-seater, has no steering wheels or pedals — on Thursday night. The plan is for the car to be capable of driving itself autonomously when it launches.
The Tesla boss said the company hopes to be producing the Cybercab before 2027, but offered no details on where the cars will be manufactured. He said consumers would be able to buy a Tesla Cybercab for a price tag under $30,000.
He also said he expects Tesla to have “unsupervised FSD” up and running in Texas and California next year in the company’s Model 3 and Model Y electric vehicles. FSD, which stands for Full Self-Driving, is Tesla’s premium driver assistance system, available today in a “supervised” version for Tesla electric vehicles.
The technology still requires a human driver at the wheel, ready to steer or brake at any time.
In reaction to the Thursday event, analyst at Barclays said that it failed to highlight any near-term opportunities for Tesla, instead prioritizing Musk’s vision for a fully autonomous driving future.
“As expected, like prior Tesla product unveils, the event was light on the details, and instead emphasized the vision underpinning Tesla’s growth endeavors in AI/AV [autonomous vehicles],” Barclays’ U.S. autos & mobility team wrote in the note early Friday.
“Yet there were no updates indicating near-term opportunities. Tesla didn’t show its low-cost model planned for 1H’25 production,” they added. “We also didn’t get any near-term updates on FSD progress, or data reflecting improvement in the system.”
Piper Sandler analysts said in a separate not Friday that “most trading-oriented firms will be underwhelmed by the robo-taxi unveiling.”
“We wouldn’t be surprised if the stock sells off in the coming weeks, as pre-event momentum fizzles,” the investment bank’s analysts said in the note.
They added that, while there were elements of the live-streamed event Thursday where it was “difficult to suppress a smile,” many investors “had expected this event to deliver something more concrete.”
It is expected to take some years still before self-driving cars become a mainstream reality on public roads, with regulators still concerned over the safety features embedded into such vehicles.
Among the few companies to have successfully launched self-driving cars on public roads is Google’s Waymo, which has offered its robotaxi service to the general public since June.
– CNBC’s Lora Kolodny and Michael Bloom contributed to this report