By Noel Randewich and Abhirup Roy
(Reuters) โ Elon Musk is running his businesses โwith great difficultyโ while working with the Trump administration, the Tesla CEO said on Monday in an interview with Fox Business.
His remarks followed Tesla losing $130 billion in stock market value in a broad selloff on Wall Street that left the electric car makerโs shares at their lowest since October.
Teslaโs shares slumped 15% to $222.15, weighing heavily on the Nasdaq, which tumbled 4% on fears that the Trump administrationโs tariffs against major U.S. trading partners could throw the country into a recession.
The decline in Teslaโs market capitalization on Monday eclipsed the $86 billion combined stock market value of Ford Motor and General Motors.
Mondayโs losses evaporated the last of a Tesla rally late last year that nearly doubled its stock following the November 5 election of U.S. President Donald Trump. That surge was fueled by optimism that Tesla would benefit from Muskโs close relationship with Trump.
Investors in Tesla have been concerned that Muskโs work leading the Department of Government Efficiency to slash government expenditure was distracting him from running his companies, which include Tesla, SpaceX, X and xAI.
Fox Businessโs Larry Kudlow asked him in an interview on Monday about the pressure. โI mean, how are you running your other businesses?โ Kudlow asked. โWith great difficulty,โ Musk replied, with a sigh.
After the recent slump in Teslaโs shares, the stock has continued to trade at multiples far higher than other automakers, with supporters betting on Muskโs promises to deliver self-driving taxis and humanoid robots.
More recently, Muskโs role in sweeping cuts to the federal workforce at the behest of Trump has led to โTesla Takedownโ protests in the U.S. against the automaker, while Teslaโs sales in Europe have slumped. On Sunday, dozens of demonstrators gathered at the Tesla showroom in Lisbon to protest against Musk, with some holding signs reading โBoycott Teslaโ.
โThe public eye seems to be coalescing around what heโs doing for the federal government. So if youโre a shareholder, you canโt help but wonder if thatโs not detracting from what he should be doing for the publicly traded company that heโs running,โ said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B. Riley Wealth.
Muskโs support for far-right parties in Europe appears to be coming at a price for Tesla sales there. Teslaโs car sales in Europe tumbled 45% in January from a year earlier, while overall EV sales jumped over 37%, according to the European Automobile Manufacturers Association.
It is difficult to determine how much Muskโs political activities are factoring into Teslaโs vehicle sales, which last year declined on an annual basis for the first time.
Analysts point to other factors in the global EV market, including increased competition from Chinese brands and legacy automakers such as GM.
(Reporting by Noel Randewich and Abhirup Roy; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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