TESLA WEEKLY CHART

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TESLA WEEKLY CHART Tesla, Inc.BATS:TSLAShavyfxhubTESLA STOCKS faced a weekly rejection at 437.63 ,the potential for explosive rally is imminent and 481.76 weekly close on the line chart will pose another resistance to upswing,break and close 481.76 look for structure on 4hr/3hr and go long. The bullish ascending channel Supplyroof will be our final target ,if all trading conditions remains positive. Tesla stocks could test 550-650 zone on the Supplyroof of the ascending bullish weekly channel. Structure in context. The ascending trendline on weekly line chart close with perfect touches (A+B+C+D+E+F+G) ,THE LETTER ‘G’ formed a double top and a clean retest to breakout of ascending (A,B,C,D,E,F,G)trendline ,so based on technical ,pattern recognition and matching,the rally is likely to retest that trendline again followed by institutional take profit. Why Tesla stocks is promising and to keep bullish trajectory in the future ? Tesla, Inc. (TSLA) was founded in July 2003 by Martin Eberhard and Marc Tarpenning as Tesla Motors. Elon Musk joined as an early investor and became CEO in 2008; he is widely regarded as the public face and driving force behind its growth, though the original founders established the company.  Scope and Major Sources of Revenue Tesla designs, develops, manufactures, sells, and leases high-performance electric vehicles (EVs), along with energy generation and storage products and related services. Its operations include two main reportable segments:  • Automotive (the dominant segment, ~73-89% of revenue): Sales and leasing of vehicles (Model 3, Y, S, X, Cybertruck, Semi), regulatory credits, Full Self-Driving (FSD) software, Supercharging, insurance, used vehicles, and maintenance.  • Energy Generation and Storage (growing, ~10-13%+ of revenue): Solar panels, Solar Roof, Powerwall, and Megapack battery systems.  Services and Other also contributes. In recent fiscal years (e.g., 2025 data), total revenue was around $95 billion, with automotive as the clear majority but energy showing strong growth potential.  Why Tesla Stock Is Promising and Bullish for the Future Tesla’s valuation and trajectory extend beyond traditional car manufacturing. It positions itself as a technology and AI company in mobility, energy, and robotics. Key reasons for optimism include: • Leadership in EVs and Energy Transition: Tesla remains a top global EV producer with a strong brand, vertical integration (batteries, software, manufacturing), and expanding energy storage deployments. Energy storage is a high-growth area with improving margins and massive demand for renewables.  • Autonomy and Robotaxi (Cybercab) Potential: This is the biggest long-term bull case. Successful scaling of unsupervised Full Self-Driving (FSD) and a robotaxi network could generate high-margin, software-like recurring revenue. Analysts highlight potential for massive valuation upside if Tesla achieves regulatory approvals and deploys at scale in 2026 and beyond.  • Optimus Humanoid Robot: Tesla is developing general-purpose humanoid robots for manufacturing, services, and more. Early commercialization targets (e.g., by end of 2026) could open enormous new markets if scaled successfully.  • Innovation and Execution Track Record: Tesla has a history of disrupting industries, rapid iteration, and leveraging AI/data advantages (e.g., from its vehicle fleet). New models, cost reductions, and global expansion support growth even amid near-term EV market challenges.  • Analyst and Market Sentiment: Bullish targets for 2026 often range from $400–$600+, with some higher in optimistic scenarios (e.g., Wedbush at $600). Catalysts like Robotaxi pilots, Optimus progress, and energy growth are expected to drive momentum. Long-term projections (ARK Invest and others) have been very bullish in the past, though actual results depend on execution.  Risks and Caveats: Tesla faces competition in EVs, execution risks on autonomy/robotics timelines, regulatory hurdles, margin pressures from pricing/competition, and macroeconomic factors. Recent periods have seen sales slowdowns and valuation volatility tied to hype around future businesses.  Overall, Tesla’s promise lies in its pivot from EV leader to an AI/robotics/energy powerhouse. Many investors remain bullish due to its technological moat and Elon Musk’s vision, but it is a high-risk, high-reward stock best suited for those with a long-term horizon who believe in its ability to deliver on ambitious goals. Terafab (or TeraFab) is Elon Musk’s ambitious joint semiconductor fabrication plant project, primarily for producing advanced AI chips to support Tesla (autonomy, Optimus robots), SpaceX, and xAI needs. It aims for massive scale (targeting terawatt-level compute) with integrated logic, memory, and advanced packaging.  Key Partners • Tesla, SpaceX, and xAI (joint venture owners/builders; xAI has ties to SpaceXAI rebranding in some reports). The project is a collaboration across Musk’s companies.  • Intel (major manufacturing/technology partner, joined in April 2026). Intel contributes expertise in design, fabrication, and packaging using its advanced processes (e.g., 14A node). This is Intel’s first significant external foundry commitment of this scale.  Tesla continues relationships with Samsung (e.g., AI6 chips) and TSMC (e.g., AI5), but Terafab focuses on greater vertical integration and U.S.-based capacity to reduce reliance on foreign suppliers.  Location: Primarily in the Austin, Texas area (near Tesla’s Gigafactory), with filings mentioning Grimes County.  Project Cost • Initial/First Phase: Approximately $55 billion (per SpaceX filings in May 2026).  • Full Buildout (All Phases): Up to $119 billion.  • Earlier estimates (around announcement in March 2026) ranged from $20–25 billion for a pilot or initial facility, with long-term analyst projections (e.g., Bernstein) suggesting trillions for ultimate terawatt-scale ambitions — though those are speculative and far beyond current plans. The project is still in early planning/filings stages, with construction and production timelines extending into later years (e.g., ramp toward 2027–2029 in some reports). It faces significant execution, talent, yield, and capital challenges typical of advanced semiconductor fabs.  This complements Tesla’s existing chip deals (e.g., with Samsung) while advancing self-sufficiency in AI hardware. #tesla