Elon Musk's Impending Exit from D.O.G.E Next Month Sparks Tesla Stock Surge: Will It Revitalise Tesla Stock After a Struggling Financial Quarter?

Kikyo

2025/04/23 12:44

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Tesla Sees Stock Spike Amidst Musk’s D.O.G.E Exit Plans

Elon Musk announced Tuesday that he plans to scale back his role in Washington beginning in May, just as Tesla works to rebound from a tough financial quarter.

During the company’s earnings call, Musk said his involvement with President Donald Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency (D.O.G.E) would be “significantly reduced” next month.

The announcement sent Tesla shares up nearly 5% in after-hours trading.

BREAKING: Elon Musk announces he’ll be stepping back from DOGE starting in May.

“Next month I will start allocating more time to Tesla.”$TSLA shares have surged over 5% in after hour trading on this news.

— Jacob King (@JacobKinge) April 22, 2025

Musk assured investors he would still support D.O.G.E’s mission to root out government waste, though on a limited basis—roughly “a day or two per week”—as long as the president requests his input.

His remarks came shortly after Tesla reported a steep 20% drop in automotive revenue and a 71% plunge in net income for Q1, raising questions about whether his partial return to Tesla leadership could help steer the company back on course.

Musk’s Political Influence Erodes After Major $300 Million Trump Investment

Musk launched D.O.G.E after contributing nearly $300 million to Trump’s 2024 campaign—a move that helped propel Trump back into the White House and earned Musk the informal title of “First Buddy.”

A $8m loan on essentially commercial terms? Skeptical. Musk gave $300m. Trump shivved him. Musk hoped to ship from Europe & China to the US. Trump set big tariffs and wants to end EV rebates. Musk should have learned from the Adelsons, Trump's friends since Atlantic City days. https://t.co/OVWyZeROoTpic.twitter.com/SuVaoewYoI

— jon kessler (@jonkessler20) April 22, 2025

Since its creation, D.O.G.E has aggressively targeted a wide range of federal agencies, including the IRS, National Park Service, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, and departments such as Agriculture, Education, Energy, Health and Human Services, Homeland Security, and Veterans Affairs.

Notably, D.O.G.E also cut into agencies tasked with overseeing Musk’s own businesses—the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), and National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA)—all of which experienced significant staffing reductions during Musk’s government tenure.

In February, the White House designated Musk as a “special government employee,” a legal classification that reduces conflict-of-interest disclosure requirements and applies to individuals serving fewer than 130 days in a calendar year.

That time limit is set to expire at the end of May unless Musk is reappointed under a different designation.

While D.O.G.E claims to have saved the federal government $160 billion, scepticism persists.

Some of its more extreme savings figures have already been scrubbed from its website following public scrutiny.

Meanwhile, Tesla’s market capitalisation has plummeted by an estimated $600 billion during the same period, raising pointed questions about whether Musk’s time in Washington has come at too high a cost.

Tesla's Reputation Still Under Fire with Ongoing Backlash

Musk also weighed in on the wave of protests that have erupted at Tesla sites across Europe and the United States.

#doge⚡