New York, February 19, 2026, 08:18 (EST) — Premarket
- Tesla was edging higher before the bell, up roughly 0.2%, with shares hovering close to $411.
- The first production Cybercab has rolled off Tesla’s Texas assembly line, the company said.
- Tesla sidestepped a 30-day license suspension in California after the state’s DMV confirmed the company pulled “Autopilot” marketing there.
Tesla was up roughly 0.2% in premarket action Thursday, changing hands at $411.32, after wrapping up the previous session at $410.63.
This week, the stock’s been bouncing around, but traders have seized on something solid for once: Tesla announced its purpose-built “Cybercab” robotaxi is now rolling off a production line.
Tesla’s autonomy efforts are hitting headwinds with regulators in a critical market, just as investors try to gauge how much of Tesla’s value comes from software and potential robotaxi income—not just selling cars.
Tesla’s first production Cybercab has come off the line at the Austin Gigafactory, the company announced on X, according to Business Insider. CEO Elon Musk weighed in, posting: “Congratulations to the Tesla team on making the first production Cybercab!” The new two-door, which skips both pedals and a steering wheel, is expected to start production in April. That timeline depends on regulatory signoff before it can legally hit the streets. Amazon’s Zoox, by contrast, already holds a federal exemption and is running a limited public service in Las Vegas and San Francisco, Business Insider noted. (Business Insider)
Tesla won’t have to serve a 30-day suspension of its California dealer and manufacturer licenses after dropping “autopilot” from its marketing language, the state’s Department of Motor Vehicles said Tuesday. Back in 2022, the DMV accused Tesla of misleading customers with both “autopilot” and “Full Self-Driving” labels. That changed when Tesla updated its FSD description to clarify that human supervision is required; the DMV then zeroed in on “autopilot.” Autopilot, according to Reuters, covers things like lane steering and highway braking, while “Full Self-Driving” manages more tasks in city driving but still needs the driver’s attention. (Reuters)
U.S. stock index futures edged down early, with broader markets looking cautious ahead of the open. Investors kept an eye on Walmart’s earnings and awaited a slate of U.S. economic indicators and comments from Fed officials. “Under a divided committee, the bias will be toward keeping interest rates on hold,” Oxford Economics lead U.S. economist Bernard Yaros said in a note, per Reuters. (Reuters)
Tesla faces a more immediate puzzle: will the robotaxi buzz turn into something investors can actually plug into their spreadsheets—production pace, approved routes, and whatever regulators are willing to greenlight for a car that ditches manual controls entirely.
The risks are clear enough. Any delays in approvals—or if Tesla winds up modifying hardware or tweaking operating limits for regulators—could push back the Cybercab rollout again, sapping momentum from the autonomy narrative. On top of that, a bump in rates triggered by stronger inflation data tends to hit high-valuation growth names first.
Investors remain focused on whether Tesla sticks to the April production kickoff it flagged. They’re also eyeing any fresh regulatory moves linked to the company’s marketing and operation of its driver-assistance software.