New York Post

GREAT HAUL OF CHINA

Tesla OK’d to roll out Full Self Driving tech

- By THOMAS BARRABI tbarrabi@nypost.com

Tesla shares surged more than 15% Monday after CEO Elon Musk secured approval to roll out “Full Self Driving” technology in China after a whirlwind weekend trip to the country.

Top Chinese officials gave Tesla tentative permission to launch the software following a meeting with Musk during his surprise trip to Beijing. Tesla will rely on Chinese tech giant Baidu’s mapping license for navigation on public roads, people familiar with the matter told The Wall Street Journal.

During his trip, Musk met with top Chinese officials, including Premier Li Qiang, who previously helped clear the way for Tesla to launch its production facility in Shanghai. The exact timing of an FSD rollout was not immediatel­y clear.

“Honored to meet with Premier Li Qiang,” Musk wrote. “We have known each other now for many years, since early Shanghai days.”

Local approval for full self-driving could provide a major boost to Tesla in China — the world’s largest auto market — at a time when his electric-car firm is struggling with sagging sales. Tesla has also faced fierce competitio­n from Chinese manufactur­ers such as BYD.

Recent stock surge

The EV pioneer’s stock has surged more than 35% in the past five days, closing at $194.05 on Monday, but is still down more than 20% on the year.

Tesla’s deal with Baidu helped to reassure officials in Beijing about data-privacy risks, sources told the Journal.

The firm has stored all data related to its Chinese business in Shanghai since 2021 as part of a compliance deal with local regulators.

The Baidu deal was “clearly key to getting the green light from

Beijing,” according to Wedbush analyst Dan Ives.

“This is a key moment for Musk as well as Beijing at a time that Tesla has faced massive domestic EV competitio­n in China along with softer demand,” Ives said in a note to investors. “While the long-term valuation story at Tesla hinges on FSD and autonomous, a key missing piece in that puzzle is Tesla making FSD available in

China, which is now a done deal.”

Musk is also seeking approval to transfer data from its Chinese fleet overseas to help train its driving software, a source familiar with the situation told Reuters.

Tesla did not respond to a request for comment.

Full Self Driving is the most advanced version of Tesla’s semiautono­mous driver-assistance software, which has drawn a positive response from the company’s loyalists as well as intense scrutiny from safety regulators in the US.

Separately, the US Supreme Court declined on Monday to hear Musk’s bid to throw out part of a securities-fraud settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission restrictin­g his public statements about Tesla.

The justices turned away Musk’s appeal of a lower court’s decision upholding the 2018 settlement reached after he said on social media that he had “funding secured” to take Tesla private — a statement the SEC in a legal action called false and misleading.

 ?? ?? All charged up
Tesla CEO Elon Musk (left) made a surprise weekend trip to China to meet with Premier Li Qiang (right), and was given approval to launch the EV company’s Full Self Driving technology in that country. Tesla shares surged nearly $26 as a result.
All charged up Tesla CEO Elon Musk (left) made a surprise weekend trip to China to meet with Premier Li Qiang (right), and was given approval to launch the EV company’s Full Self Driving technology in that country. Tesla shares surged nearly $26 as a result.

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