1 of 2 | Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on Wall Street on Monday, November 18, 2024 in New York City. U.S. stocks climbed slightly on Monday and Tesla (TSLA) shares continued its post-election rally. Photo by John Angelillo/UPI |
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Nov. 18 (UPI) — Stock in Tesla saw a jump Monday after a report indicated President-elect Donald Trump may seek to relax federal regulations on self-driving vehicles.
On Monday, stock shares in Elon Musk’s Tesla went up 8% to $346.81 after a Bloomberg report said Trump’s transition team is planning to design a federal U.S. Department of Transportation framework for the regulation of self-driving vehicles
In afternoon trading, stock for the company was up nearly 5% after the report’s release. This now brings Tesla’s market cap to $1.1 trillion.
The tech guru contributed more than $100 million to re-elect Trump.
It arrived nearly a week after Musk and ex-presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy were named to lead Trump’s new so-called “Department of Government Efficiency.”
Musk, who already holds billions of dollars in federal government contracts, is poised to gain even more wealth by such actions in a second Trump administration with a federal framework possibly representing a $1 trillion financial opportunity for Tesla.
“Musk’s significant influence in the Trump White House,” Wedbush analyst Dan Ives told Fortune on Sunday, “is already having a major influence and ultimately the golden path for Tesla around Cybercabs” in a world of Uber and Lyft.
Ives says he thinks Tesla is headed for a $2 trillion valuation.
The controversial South African-born billionaire played a key role in re-electing Trump and was an often-seen surrogate on the campaign trail and now is a central figure in the transition from outgoing President Joe Biden to Trump’s second term.
According to Ives, Musk’s business objectives are “now within reach with an emboldened Trump/Musk strategic alliance playing out in real-time and very in line with our thesis.”
Meanwhile, a Trump transition spokeswoman didn’t address the report directly other than to say the president-elect “will deliver on the promises he made during the campaign.”