NEW YORK, Feb 21, 2026, 10:47 EST — Market closed.
- Tesla finished Friday’s session just 0.03% higher at $411.82, following the rollout of a lower-priced Cybertruck and another round of price reductions.
- A U.S. judge has left intact the $243 million verdict over a deadly crash where Tesla’s Autopilot driver-assist system was at issue.
- Traders are eyeing Monday to see if the 10-day Cybertruck deal holds. Legal questions over self-driving tech are also drawing attention.
Tesla closed almost flat on Friday, eking out a 0.03% gain to $411.82. The stock barely budged as the company once more adjusted Cybertruck prices and dealt with a fresh legal blow related to its Autopilot system.
Tesla’s latest push on pricing comes as the company tries to spark demand, with investors already on edge about profit margins. The Cybertruck, originally billed as a game-changing, mass-market pickup, has become a kind of real-time experiment in just how far Tesla has to cut prices to sustain order flow.
Tesla’s push on autonomy and robotics comes as legal scrutiny over driver-assistance systems lingers. Even if the stock stays flat, news about lawsuits and related costs can still weigh on investor mood.
Tesla late Thursday rolled out a dual-motor all-wheel-drive Cybertruck at $59,990, but only for a limited 10-day stretch, and chopped the price of its flagship Cyberbeast to $99,990 from $114,990. CEO Elon Musk called the discount “only for the next 10 days.” The company also seemed to eliminate the “Luxe Package,” which had combined Supervised Full Self-Driving and complimentary Supercharger usage. Analysts note: pushing more lower-priced vehicles tightens gross margin — that’s profit after production costs — unless Tesla can counter with either cheaper manufacturing or boosting its software and services income. 1
Tesla’s latest price tweak lands the company where it’s often been before—chasing volume, with few details about what happens after the current deal wraps up. The $60,000 starting price has investors wondering: is this just a fleeting push, or the new standard? They’re watching closely for clues about demand for the sharp-edged steel truck.
Tesla’s attempt to throw out a $243 million jury verdict was shot down in Miami, where a federal judge found the trial evidence backed the panel’s decision in the 2019 Autopilot Model S crash. Tesla, likely to take the fight to an appeals court, faces both compensatory and punitive damages — the latter designed as punishment. 2
Tesla wasn’t alone on Friday, as the broader market lent a hand. U.S. stocks closed up after the Supreme Court blocked President Donald Trump’s global tariffs, sending major indexes higher despite a climb in Treasury yields. 3
This week, all eyes are on tech earnings, especially with Nvidia dropping numbers Wednesday—risk sentiment could shift fast. When megacaps start moving, it often spills over into high-valuation stocks like Tesla, regardless of whatever headlines Tesla’s making itself. 4
Still, there’s risk on the table. Should Cybertruck discounts simply shift buyers down from pricier trims rather than lift overall demand, both revenue and margins could take a hit—leaving investors to see the truck as just another casualty in the EV price wars, not a margin booster. Additional legal scrutiny over driver-assistance claims would further complicate Tesla’s push on autonomy.
U.S. markets are back in action Monday, but traders are eyeing Tesla’s timeline. If the 10-day Cybertruck offer began Friday, the window runs out March 1—unless Tesla pushes it further. That date could signal another shift in pricing.