What Just Happened?
Tesla shares plummeted nearly 7.5% today, falling to roughly $291.50 after CEO Elon Musk announced plans to form a new political party—dubbed the “America Party”—and launched a public spat with former President Trump. This sudden decline marks a broader slump, as Tesla’s stock has dropped 21–27% year-to-date, shaking investor confidence
As a result, short sellers—investors who bet on the stock falling—are on track to gain approximately $1.4 billion in paper profits from their open positions . This comes on top of an even bigger windfall: over $4 billion made during a sharp market drop in early June amid a Musk–Trump online clash .
Why Short Sellers Beat the Market
Short-selling involves borrowing shares, selling them high, and buying them back after prices fall—thus profiting from declines. A drop of around 7.5% on Tesla’s hundreds-of-billions market cap equates to massive gains for those holding large short positions. According to analysts, Tesla remains one of the most-shorted U.S. stocks, with roughly $27.7 billion worth of shares sold short—highlighting sustained negative sentiment
What’s Behind the Selloff?
- Musk’s Political Move: Launching a political party raises concerns that the CEO’s attention—and Tesla’s focus—may be diverted away from core operations like EV production, software, and AI integration
- Declining Deliveries: Tesla reported a second consecutive quarterly drop in vehicle deliveries, weakening investor optimism
- Trump-Musk Fallout: Musk’s increasingly public feud with Trump threatens regulatory and subsidy support, with Trump warning of potential benefit cuts

Market Impact
- Tesla’s decline weighed on the Magnificent Seven, becoming the worst performer among top tech stocks this year—eroding over $80 billion in market cap
- The surge in short profits reflects a broader shift—short sellers have made an estimated $7 billion YTD on Tesla, signaling sustained investor wariness
What This Means for Tesla
- Investor fatigue: Many shareholders are calling on Tesla’s board to rein in Musk’s political ambitions and refocus on core business activities
- Regulatory risk: Political distractions could invite scrutiny from bodies like the U.S. Transportation Department, which oversees Tesla’s self-driving tech.
- Volatility alert: Heavy short interest means Tesla’s stock remains vulnerable to rapid swings—whether triggered by positive news or stronger-than-expected earnings.
Looking Ahead
Tesla’s short sellers may bank big today—but tomorrow is uncertain. The market’s focus will shift to:
- Political clarity—whether the “America Party” accelerates or fades.
- Production momentum—progress on new factories, Cybertruck, and Full Self-Driving (FSD) tech.
- Quarterly earnings reports—delivery numbers and guidance.
If Tesla’s fundamentals bounce back, short positions could quickly reverse. But for now, the headline: short sellers are up more than $1 billion, and the pressure is firmly on Tesla in this politically charged environment.