Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) shares rebounded approximately 3% in early trading Monday, recovering some ground after a sharp 6.6% decline on Friday. The stock traded near $403.65 as investors refocused on a pivotal week for Elon Musk's business empire, with SpaceX's highly anticipated initial public offering expected to price on Thursday.

The broader market also moved higher, with the S&P 500 gaining 0.7% and the Nasdaq Composite advancing 1.2%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 159 points, or 0.3%. Friday's selloff was triggered by a stronger-than-expected U.S. jobs report, which fueled concerns that interest rates could remain elevated or rise further, leading to a 4.2% drop in the Nasdaq.

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SpaceX IPO Takes Center Stage

Investor attention this week is increasingly centered on SpaceX, the rocket, AI, and satellite company also led by Musk. The company is expected to price its record-setting IPO on Thursday, making it one of the most closely watched public offerings of the year. Tesla and SpaceX have become increasingly interconnected through collaborations in artificial intelligence applications and semiconductor manufacturing.

Speculation about a potential combination of the two companies has persisted in prediction markets. According to betting activity cited from Kalshi, participants currently assign a 50% probability to a merger occurring before May 2027. On Polymarket, odds imply a 43% chance of a merger before the end of 2026.

China Sales Return to Growth

Tesla also received support from improving sales data in China. Retail sales of Tesla vehicles in China rose 22.5% year-over-year in May to 47,281 vehicles, according to figures released Monday by the China Passenger Car Association. This marked Tesla's first year-over-year increase in Chinese retail sales since February and ended a two-month stretch of annual declines.

Retail volumes had fallen roughly 24% in March and about 10% in April before returning to growth in May. The May figure also represented a significant improvement from the previous month, with domestic retail sales increasing 82.2% from April's 25,956 vehicles. While May sales remained below the 56,107 vehicles Tesla sold in March, they exceeded February's level of 38,206 units by roughly 24%. The latest figures suggest Tesla may be stabilizing in one of its most important global markets after facing heightened competition from domestic Chinese electric-vehicle manufacturers.

JPMorgan Upgrades Tesla

Investor sentiment also received a boost from a rating change at JPMorgan. The bank on Friday upgraded Tesla to Neutral from Underweight, ending a bearish stance it had maintained since July 2023. Analyst Rajat Gupta cited Tesla's vertically integrated supply chain and growing artificial intelligence capabilities as key reasons for the change.

Gupta said the interaction between Tesla's various business segments, including automotive operations and robotics initiatives, remains underappreciated by investors. "Using cell and vehicle production factories as a test bed for Optimus/Humanoids should not only lower [costs] for the base automotive business, but more importantly, help validate the product at an industrial scale," Gupta wrote in a note to investors.

For more on Tesla's recent performance, see our earlier coverage: Tesla Stock Gains 13% in Five Days Ahead of Q1 Earnings Report. Meanwhile, broader market dynamics continue to influence tech stocks, as discussed in Nvidia CEO Calls $1.3T Chip Rout a Discount; Analysts Weigh AI Demand vs. Rate Risks.

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice.