Published on 06/06/2025 07:02 AM
For months, Tesla shareholders were tormented by Elon Musk’s role in the administration of President Donald Trump. But any relief brought by his formal government exit last week quickly turned to fear as the electric-vehicle maker’s chief executive traded barbs with his former boss.
Tesla Inc.’s stock plummeted 14% on Thursday after a rift over Trump’s proposed tax legislation exploded into an all-out public feud with the president threatening to end government contracts and subsidies for Tesla and Musk’s Space Exploration Technologies Corp. The rout shed $153 billion from Tesla’s market value, the biggest one-day drop on record, while yielding short sellers $4 billion in gains, according to data from S3 Partners.
While Tesla shareholders are no strangers to stomach-churning swings, Thursday’s slump showcased just how pronounced Musk’s influence over his company’s stock is. And while the rout may eventually present a buying opportunity, some market watchers say it’s too risky to try to catch a falling knife.
Japan’s exports fell in the first 20 days of May as the Trump administration’s sweeping tariffs continued to disrupt trade.
Exports measured by value dropped 3% from the same period a year earlier, the Finance Ministry reported Friday. That compared with a 2.3% gain in the first 20 days of April, and a 2.0% rise for all of that month. Growth in exports has averaged 6.2% over the year through April.
Japan’s trade balance was in the red, with a deficit of ¥1.1 trillion ($7.7 billion). The 20-day data don’t provide details such as a breakdown of exports to specific countries or regions. The figures for the full month of May are set to be released on June 18.
Tesla Inc.’s shares sank as Elon Musk and President Donald Trump’s simmering feud devolved into a public war of words between two of the world’s most powerful people.
The stock lost 14% on Thursday, leading to an erosion of $152 billion in he company’s market capitalisation and wiped out $34 billion out of Elon Musk’s personal fortune as well.
The president later floated terminating federal contracts and subsidies extended to Musk’s companies and said that he had asked the Tesla and SpaceX leader to leave his administration, which Musk said was a “lie.” Musk went a step further late in the day, saying he would decommission a SpaceX craft used by the US.
Asia-Pacific markets opened higher as investors assessed the phone call between U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping.
Trump and Xi spoke on Thursday and agreed that officials from the U.S. and China will meet soon to continue negotiations aimed at ending the ongoing trade war.
Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225 rose 0.14% at the open, and the Topix gained 0.24%. South Korea’s Kospi extended gains to jump 1.49%, and the small-cap Kosdaq added 0.8%.
Futures for Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index stood at 23,822, pointing to a lower open. The Hang Seng Index had closed at 23,906.97 in the previous session.
The phone call between US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping left the street disappointed as it sought some bigger announcements instead of just another round of trade talks between the two sparring nations.
That, along with an ugly public spat between the President and Tesla chief Elon Musk over the former’s One Big Beautiful Bill weighed on sentiment as Tesla shares sank 14%, taking $152 billion in market capitalisation along with them.
Futures on Wall Street are trading with some green after a disappointing session on Thursday.
Currently, the Dow futures are up 60 points, while the S&P 500 futures are at the flat line. Nasdaq futures are down 50 points.
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Futures are currently mixed on Wall Street after a disappointing session overnight.
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