Tesla Shares Hit New 2025 High After Musk’s $1B Purchase

Imagem-2025-09-23T100901.788-1024x576 Tesla Shares Hit New 2025 High After Musk’s $1B Purchase
Elon Musk speaks during at a Tesla event on September 29, 2015 in Fremont, California.Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Tesla shares surged to a new 2025 closing high on Monday, September 22, reaching $434.21 after climbing as much as $440 in early trading, driven by CEO Elon Musk’s $1 billion open-market stock purchase and renewed analyst optimism.

Musk’s Bold Buyback Signal

Last week, Elon Musk purchased 2.57 million Tesla shares at prices between $372.37 and $396.54, marking his first significant open-market buy since early 2020 and signaling strong confidence in the company’s long-term prospects (Yahoo Finance). Tesla shares closed up 1.9%, surpassing their previous year-to-date record of $428.22 set on January 15 and capping off gains in nine of the last ten trading sessions.

Over the past month, Tesla stock has rallied more than 30%, buoyed by Musk’s high-visibility purchase and anticipation of robust third-quarter delivery numbers before the federal EV tax credit expires on September 30.

Analyst Upgrades and Market Momentum

Analyst forecasts added fuel to the rally. Piper Sandler’s Alexander Potter raised his price target from $400 to $500 after assessing Tesla’s dominance in AI and autonomous driving, noting that Chinese EV companies continue to look to Tesla for “real-world AI” guidance (Mitrade). Meanwhile, Goldman Sachs hiked its target to $395 from $300 and lifted its Q3 delivery estimate to 455,000 vehicles, up from 430,000, reflecting stronger consumer demand and the looming tax-credit cutoff (StockTwits).

These bullish revisions underscore Tesla’s evolving identity from an automaker to an AI and robotics innovator, with investors betting on continued leadership in self-driving technology and next-generation mobility services.

Robotaxi Ambitions and Regulatory Hurdles

Tesla’s plan to expand its Robotaxi service into Nevada, Florida, and California has also captured investor attention, despite regulatory obstacles in the nation’s most populous state. Reuters reported that Tesla has not yet applied for full on-demand ride-hailing permits in California and must rely on a limousine-style authorization for human-driven pilot trips, a process regulators warned “could take years” under current rules (Reuters).

While the Robotaxi rollout remains uncertain, the prospect of scaling autonomous ride-hailing continues to drive excitement about Tesla’s revenue diversification beyond vehicle sales.

As Tesla trades roughly $60 below its all-time high of $489, technical analysts note a decisive break above that level could trigger another surge in buying. With Q3 delivery results expected soon, investors are closely watching whether Tesla can sustain its momentum and justify Musk’s high-profile stock purchase.

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