Why Tesla stock keeps falling: here's top 3 reasons

Why Tesla stock keeps falling: here's top 3 reasons
Devesh Kumar
27 Feb 2026, 17:50 PM

Tesla stock (NASDAQ: TSLA) extended its decline on Friday, trading near $400.55 and leaving investors increasingly uneasy.

The slide doesn’t appear driven by a single headline but by a mix of slow-building pressures weighing on sentiment.

Shares are now down roughly 9% year-to-date, underscoring a challenging start to the year for holders.

The robotaxi dream is cracking

Tesla’s valuation depends heavily on the market believing autonomy will turn into real, regulated revenue.

That story took a fresh hit this week after Victor Nechita, described as the vehicle program manager for Tesla’s purpose-built robotaxi, announced he is leaving the company.

The tougher issue is the permitting and “real-world miles” paper trail.

Tesla has recorded no miles with California regulators since 2019, and only 562 miles total since 2016, even as California’s framework requires extensive logged testing before stepping up to more advanced permits.

Separately, Tesla has “no commercial robotaxi permits in any major US market,” and described the company as being in legal conflict with regulators it needs for approvals.

Even the language from regulators has gotten sharper.

The California regulators said Tesla “did nothing” to acquire robotaxi permits in the state.

For a stock that one data provider shows trading around 380 times trailing earnings, anything that weakens the autonomy narrative quickly becomes a valuation problem.

Europe is slipping away

Tesla is also fighting a demand and execution problem in Europe, and the early-2026 data is ugly.

ArenaEV cited registrations down 44% in January 2026 across five major European markets compared with a year earlier, with especially steep drops in places like Norway and the Netherlands.​

This matters because Europe isn’t a “nice to have” region for Tesla; it’s a scale market where brand momentum can swing fast when models age, and competition tightens.

The decline is seen as part of a multi-year slide in the region, following reported drops in 2024 and 2025.​

The financials aren’t helping the narrative.

Tesla’s Q4 automotive revenue fell 11% year over year, from $19.8 billion to $17.7 billion. The figures missed projections around $19.3 billion, underscoring that the pressure isn’t just “macro,” it’s showing up in expectations versus reality.

Tesla stock: Valuation has no safety net

When a stock is cheap, investors can argue the bad news is “priced in.” Tesla doesn’t have that cushion right now.

Tesla’s trailing P/E is around 379.93, meaning investors are paying roughly $380 for every $1 of the past year’s earnings.​

That’s why even incremental downgrades or estimate cuts matter more than usual.

Zacks’ earnings tables show consensus EPS estimates have drifted lower versus 30 days ago across multiple periods.

The nerves are visible among the bulls.

Tesla investor Gary Black arguing that nothing signals confidence like a CEO buying stock, and he linked Tesla’s 2026 drop to underperformance versus the Nasdaq-100.