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Additional Reading from MarketBeat Media Would a Tesla–SpaceX Merger Be the Ultimate Musk Move...or a Red Flag?Author: Sam Quirke. Publication Date: 4/3/2026. With shares of Tesla Inc (NASDAQ: TSLA) continuing to trade on the back foot, investors are right to be wondering if the company's best days are behind it. Despite talking up his vision to transform Tesla into the world's leading robotics and autonomy company, CEO Elon Musk has yet to convince investors that will happen anytime soon. At the same time, Tesla continues to underwhelm in its core electric-vehicle (EV) business, with reports this week showing the company missed its Q1 delivery targets. We've found The Next Elon Musk… and what we believe to be the next Tesla. It's already racked up $26 billion in government contracts. Peter Thiel just bet $1 Billion on it. π Unlock the ticker now and get it completely free. Key PointsTesla is down nearly 30% from its December highs and is near its 2026 low. With sentiment so weak, the ongoing rumors of a potential merger with SpaceX add intrigue. Still, the real question is whether that would strengthen the Tesla story or distract from what actually matters. Analysts remain broadly bullish heading into Q2, with the most recent price targets calling for as much as 60% upside from current levels. - Special Report: Have $500? Invest in Elon's AI Masterplan
With its traditional business slowing and its future initiatives showing little momentum, it's unsurprising the company may be exploring other ways to stay relevant. Recent weeks have seen rumors gain traction that, if true, could do just that. These rumors center on speculation that Musk may consolidate parts of his ecosystem, possibly via some form of Tesla–SpaceX combination.
SpaceX is reportedly on track for what would be a record-breaking IPO later this year, and if Tesla could ride that hype, its stock might reverse the recent downtrend. It all sounds exciting, but the real questions are what's driving the chatter and what the practical upside and downside would look like if the idea moved from rumor to reality. Why the SpaceX Merger Narrative Is Gaining CredibilityThe possibility of a Tesla–SpaceX merger shouldn't surprise investors, given Musk's willingness to consolidate his companies where it makes strategic sense. When SpaceX announced on Feb. 2 that xAI—Musk's AI company behind the Grok chatbot—had joined SpaceX, it became clear there is growing overlap across the compute infrastructures, autonomy visions, and artificial intelligence (AI) capabilities used by xAI, SpaceX, and Tesla. That overlap makes the idea of Tesla eventually becoming part of that structure far more credible than it would have seemed a year ago. From a strategic perspective, the upside case is easy to understand. A combined Tesla and SpaceX entity would bring together the strengths of both companies: Tesla's work in robotics, full self-driving, and energy storage, and SpaceX's global satellite infrastructure and launch capabilities. This is ultimately a narrative expansion. Tesla is already valued as more than an EV company, and a merger would reinforce the idea that it is building a broader technology platform. If investors buy into that narrative, it could justify higher multiples over time. The Execution Risk Would Be RealThe challenge is that, so far this year, investors haven't been buying Tesla's pivot narrative. The financial rationale for a potential merger is also less clear than the strategic one. Tesla's valuation is still primarily driven by its progress in autonomy, AI, robotics, and energy—areas that could be boosted by a merger but would not necessarily depend on it. At the same time, with SpaceX preparing what could be the biggest IPO in history, it isn't obvious SpaceX needs Tesla's balance sheet to continue scaling. Merging teams and systems from two large organizations could slow SpaceX at a moment when speed may be critical. And that is before you even get to the question of execution. Tesla is navigating a complex transition, balancing margin pressure in its EV business while investing heavily in AI and autonomy. Adding another large, capital-intensive business to the mix risks stretching management focus at a time when execution needs to be tighter than ever. What Comes Next—and What Investors Should Focus On Even if Wedbush analyst Dan Ives believes Musk plans to create a unified "long-term AI juggernaut," a full merger still seems unlikely in the near term. A more realistic path is continued collaboration across Musk's companies, with shared investments in AI, infrastructure, and potentially even hardware. That approach would allow Tesla to benefit from the broader ecosystem without taking on the full complexity of a merger. It also positions both companies for a better chance of success down the line, should they decide to combine more formally. From a stock perspective, the key drivers for Tesla remain largely unchanged. Its ability to move back toward recent analyst targets, such as Canaccord Genuity's $420 or Wedbush's $600, will depend on verifiable progress and follow-through. The stock's recent pullback has helped temper expectations, creating room for upside if execution improves in the coming quarters. That remains the core investment case today, more so than a potential merger that may or may not happen in future years. |
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