HomeNewsOpinionElon Musk loses autonomy in race for Tesla robotaxis

Elon Musk loses autonomy in race for Tesla robotaxis

Driverless vehicles will advance only as quickly as society — and cautious bureaucrats — can tolerate

May 21, 2024 / 15:51 IST
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Elon Musk
In pivoting to autonomy, Musk has placed more of Tesla’s fortunes in the hands of public officials.

No one values autonomy more than Elon Musk. Except, perhaps, other Tesla Inc bulls. For example, RBC Capital Markets’ base case valuation for Tesla is just over $1 trillion — roughly double the current valuation — of which less than 6% relates to the manufacture and sale of electric vehicles. Some $627 billion of it relates to “robotaxis” — a figure bigger than the entire current market cap.  There’s a reason that Musk, the chief executive, routinely prods investors to view Tesla not as a carmaker but as an artificial intelligence pioneer. Its next big event is a “robotaxi unveil” scheduled for August 8.

Yet in pivoting wholeheartedly to autonomy, Musk may actually be constraining his own — and, by extension, the boundless theorizing that buoys Tesla’s stock.

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There was a time when selling EVs was considered exciting enough to propel Tesla’s stock higher. Competition and slowing growth have put paid to that, it seems.

Selling EVs is relatively straightforward. We’ve had a century or more to get used to the idea of people operating vehicles, often at high speed, with minimal training (how fondly I recall all 10 minutes of my New York State driving test). Without taking away from Tesla’s achievement in bringing EVs into the mainstream, that mainstream could easily accommodate new vehicles whose only big difference was the resort to a plug instead of a nozzle. EVs remain subject to the constraints of regulations and public opinion, but, by and large, those aren’t any different from those pertaining to traditional vehicles.