Tesla is poised to capitalize on Canada's recent repeal of 100% tariffs on Chinese-made electric vehicles, bolstered by its extensive Canadian sales network and prior shipments from Shanghai. The automaker is not only set to resume exports of a Canada-specific Model Y but is also shifting its focus towards higher-margin software services, including its robotaxi initiative and advanced AI technologies. Despite a forecasted decline in earnings and a high P/E ratio, investor enthusiasm remains strong as Tesla's strategic pivot positions it as a leader in both the electric vehicle and autonomous driving sectors.

“Elon Musk says Tesla’s restarted Dojo3 will be for ‘space-based AI compute’.”

“Tesla launches robotaxi rides in Austin with no human safety driver.”

“Tesla Kills Standard Autopilot as It Pushes Buyers to Subscription-Based Option”

“Tesla discontinues Autopilot in bid to boost adoption of its Full Self-Driving software.”

“Tesla could be among the first winners of Canada’s move to drop 100% tariffs on Chinese-made EVs, thanks to early Shanghai shipments and its established Canadian sales network, experts say.”

“Tesla is killing its basic Autopilot mode in North America, encouraging customers to pay for a $99 full self-driving subscription instead.”

“Lemonade launches an insurance product for Tesla Full Self-Driving customers”

“Tesla removed Autopilot from its entire line, leaving the Model 3 and Model Y with only adaptive cruise control as standard. Many automakers today offer lane centering as standard on entry-level models, while Tesla has moved this functionality behind the FSD paywall.”
“ARK sold more than 86K shares of Tesla worth over $37 million and trimmed holdings in Illumina, Intuit and other software and life sciences names. ARK is clearly rotating away from established leaders and doubling down on early-stage technologies it believes can define the next decade.”
“Tesla's renewed interest in Dojo3 comes after it abruptly ended the original Dojo project last year...Restarting a successor project could indicate Tesla is reassessing the role proprietary compute infrastructure may play in its autonomy strategy, even as execution risks and capital demands remain part of the equation.”