 Dear Reader, Dr. Mark Skousen here. You want to know what makes me furious? Watching the same scam play out over and over. A company like SpaceX could go public any day now… in what Bloomberg is touting as "the biggest IPO of ALL TIME." And who is allowed to get in early? The hedge fund guys. The Goldman partners. The private equity sharks. The same people who've already won the game ten times over. They gobble up shares at pre-IPO prices… where around 95% of the gains are made. Then they open the gates to everyone else — after they've already locked in their fortunes. Regular investors get the leftovers. The scraps. I've been fortunate… Early in my career, I made the right connections. CIA directors. I’ve met four US presidents. Wall Street power players. The types of people who can get you in Pre-IPO. I've had a seat at the table my whole life. And it's made me wealthy. But I'm 77 years old now. I'm tired of watching good people get shut out of opportunities that could change their lives. So when I heard SpaceX could be getting ready for a $1.5 TRILLION IPO... I decided to pay it forward. Today, I’m prepared to share an "access code" that lets my readers grab a pre-IPO stake in SpaceX. Before Elon’s big announcement. Before the feeding frenzy. Before regular investors get shut out again. For once, the door is open. And I'm holding it for you. Click here to see how to get your pre-IPO ‘access code’. Yours for peace, prosperity, and liberty, AEIOU, Dr. Mark Skousen Macroeconomic Strategist, The Oxford Club P.S. After meeting Elon face-to-face and conducting my own due diligence… Im now convinced he’ll announce the IPO on March 26, 2026. Don’t miss your shot at life-changing returns. Click here before this window closes forever.
Special Report Tesla's 2026 May Hinge on a March 9 OutcomeWritten by Sam Quirke. Published: 3/4/2026. 
Key Points- Tesla shares are once again testing critical support near $390, with the bulls forced to defend it again.
- After two extensions, Tesla must deliver key data to regulators by March 9, putting its autonomy narrative under direct scrutiny.
- With analysts growing more cautious and the stock struggling to gain momentum, this deadline could determine whether 2026 becomes a reset or breakdown year.
- Special Report: The Market Reset Is Coming—Here's How to Read It Early (From Krypton Street)

Shares of Tesla Inc (NASDAQ: TSLA) are trading around $390 — back at the bottom of a multi-month range after repeatedly failing to build on January's earnings beat. The company topped headline expectations in that report, yet the stock was unable to sustain upside momentum. Since then, sellers have steadily pushed it back toward this support level, which has been defended twice in recent months. Those repeated tests suggest bullish conviction could be thinning. But another big test for Tesla approaches on March 9, and it could matter far more than short-term price action in determining whether the stock sees upside in 2026. Why the March 9 Deadline MattersSince entering the market in 1982, Louis Navellier predicted nearly every twist and turn in U.S. stocks, from Black Monday and the dot-com crash to the housing crisis and the rise of Nvidia in 2005. That's why the New York Times calls him an icon among growth investors. Since 1998, his proprietary system would've returned 13,126% in backtests, 13X the S&P and 106 times the average investor. Now he's uncovered one investment involving President Trump's plan to lead the world in artificial intelligence, a closely guarded high-tech facility Elon Musk is building in Memphis, and a paradigm shift that could add as much as $23 trillion to the global economy, and he's investing $358 million of his own firm's money in the outcome. Get the name and ticker of Louis Navellier's free pick now Tesla faces a deadline to provide the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) with detailed data tied to its Full Self-Driving (FSD) system, following an investigation into traffic violations and system performance. The company has already received two extensions on its original mid-January deadline and is likely testing the patience of the NHTSA. That makes next week's submission a do-or-die compliance moment rather than routine paperwork. Although this is not a final ruling or enforcement action, the optics are important. Delivering comprehensive, reassuring data could help ease regulatory pressure and reinforce Tesla's claim that its autonomy roadmap remains intact. Failing to satisfy regulators, on the other hand, risks escalating scrutiny and prolonging uncertainty around one of the company's most important strategic pillars. For a business whose valuation increasingly hinges on autonomy rather than vehicle volume alone, that distinction matters. Investors are no longer simply betting on Tesla's electric vehicle deliveries. Instead, they're betting on its Full Self-Driving and robotaxi ambitions, and the broader artificial intelligence (AI) narrative that Elon Musk has framed as Tesla's future. Autonomy Drives the MultipleAs we've recently highlighted, Tesla's valuation now reflects far more than just car sales. The company's shift toward an "Amazing Abundance" vision, centered on robotics and AI, has encouraged investors to look beyond near-term delivery softness and margin pressure. That also creates fragility. If autonomy progress appears stalled or vulnerable to regulatory setbacks, the premium multiple becomes harder to justify—especially when the stock is already under pressure. At roughly $390, Tesla remains about 20% below December's all-time high, and investors are clearly looking for tangible execution to back up the company's ambitions. This tension, and growing skepticism, is visible in recent analyst commentary. Barclays has given the stock a Neutral rating in recent weeks, while BNP Paribas this week reiterated a Sell-equivalent stance with a $280 price target, implying roughly 30% downside. Coupled with similarly bearish views from Phillip Securities (a $215 target last month) and JPMorgan (a $145 target in January), the skeptics are getting louder. That makes the March 9 deadline feel less symbolic and more like a real-time test of whether Tesla can preserve credibility at a pivotal moment. The Bears Are Growing LouderThe technical backdrop adds to the pressure. Tesla has been giving up ground since before Christmas and has set a multi-month run of lower highs. Each bounce has been shallower, and each test of $390 has made the bulls' resolve look more fragile. Deliveries are weakening, competition in the EV space is intensifying, and expectations around Tesla's autonomy potential may be running ahead of execution. In that context, another regulatory cloud would strengthen the case that the stock's premium valuation is due for a reset. Conversely, a clean regulatory outcome that removes uncertainty could quickly flip the narrative. Tesla has shown in the past that when a major overhang clears, sentiment can turn rapidly and force short sellers to cover. The $390 Line in the SandIf Tesla navigates next week's March 9 deadline without triggering deeper concerns, it could open the door to a move back toward the upper end of the recent range and potentially re-ignite the broader uptrend. If the outcome disappoints, however, the combination of regulatory uncertainty and a third failed support test could tip the balance decisively in favor of the bears. In that scenario, the argument that Tesla cannot afford anything less than near-perfect execution would gain serious traction. Either way, next week will likely determine whether Tesla stabilizes here or slides into a steeper downtrend.
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