Tesla makes its ride-hailing debut with a service starting in June in Austin, where cars will circulate without a driver or supervision.
A more favorable federal regulatory and legislative environment may help propel the growth of driverless ride-hailing vehicles in the United States.
Plus, Toyota remains the world's top-selling automaker despite a sales dip, and Waymo may soon come to a city near you.
Elon Musk doesn’t want to be known as the “boy who cried FSD” anymore, a moniker he gave himself for his many years of repeated promises related to autonomous driving. Now, he claims that Tesla’s ...
Waymo, Alphabet’s self-driving unit, is planning to expand the testing of its autonomous driving technology this year to ten new cities.
That helps underscore UBS analyst Joseph Spak's belief that investors don't really view Tesla (TSLA) as a carmaker any more. "We can almost definitively say the market doesn't treat TSLA like an auto ...
Tesla’s weak revenue growth and high P/E ratio signal overvaluation. See why TSLA stock is facing pressure amid competition and stagnant vehicle sales.
Elon Musk announced that Tesla would start an FSD Unsupervised pilot in Austin as a paid robotaxi service in June before expanding nationwide ...
Tesla expects capital expenditure to exceed $11 billion this year and in each of the following two fiscal years, the electric automaker said in a filing on Thursday.
Tesla shares rose about 3% before the bell on Thursday as plans to roll out cheaper electric vehicles and paid autonomous car ...
The robotaxi service Musk said will launch in June will likely be distinct from the purpose-built “Cybercab” vehicles that it ...
Tesla’s fourth-quarter revenue and earnings fell short of analysts’ projections. After-hours trading saw the stock first ...