Previous close | 46.30 |
Open | 45.50 |
Bid | 46.60 |
Ask | 47.25 |
Strike | 180.00 |
Expiry date | 2025-06-20 |
Day's range | 43.60 - 45.50 |
Contract range | N/A |
Volume | |
Open interest | 3.07k |
Tesla has abruptly fired the team running its electric vehicle charging business, raising doubts about the future of one of the largest US charging networks, which other carmakers, such as General Motors and Ford, have said they will also use.
Just over a year ago, Elon Musk shared the stage at Tesla's investor day in Texas with 16 executives who gave detailed presentations on the company's technology and growth plans, then lined up behind their boss in a show of solidarity. "We've obviously got significant bench strength here," Musk said at the time, responding to investor concerns that the world's most valuable automaker was too much a one-man show. Tesla, Musk and the 16 executives on the stage last year could not be reached for comment.
Elon Musk's move to lay off the department responsible for Tesla's electric vehicle chargers has touched off worries in the auto industry that EVs from other automakers will have trouble joining Tesla's network. Several leaders of Tesla's Supercharger team posted social media messages saying they were told Monday night that entire group of about 500 had been laid off by CEO Musk, who seemed to confirm the move in a posting Tuesday on X, the social media site he now owns.