Magnificent Seven stocks, including AI leader Nvidia, are among the best stocks to watch in today's stock market.
(Bloomberg) -- The US’s top auto-safety regulator extended its years-long investigation of Tesla Inc.’s Autopilot to determine whether a fix the carmaker made months ago does enough to keep people from misusing the system.Most Read from BloombergPlunging Home Prices, Fleeing Companies: Austin’s Glow Is FadingJavier Milei Fuels Wild Rally That Makes Peso No. 1 in WorldFed’s Preferred Core Inflation Gauge Rose at Brisk Pace in MarchHuawei’s New Phone Runs Latest Version of Made-in-China ChipBillio
Tesla is looking to make a move above a key resistance level after gaining more than 15% this week following first-quarter earnings. Drew Baglino, who served as senior vice president of powertrain and energy at Tesla, sold 1.14 million TSLA shares for around $181.5 million, according to SEC filings Thursday. Baglino announced on April 15 via a post on X, formerly Twitter, that he had decided to leave Tesla.