Investor's Corner
Tesla opens job posting for Intrusion Detection Security Engineer amid reports of sabotage
On the heels of a recently-filed lawsuit against a former process technician over allegations of data theft, hacking, and misreporting to the media, Tesla has posted a job opening for an Intrusion Detection Security Engineer.
The new job posting, which could be viewed in full here, was initially shared by journalist Bozi Tatarevic on Twitter. As could be seen in the listing, the person selected for the job would be tasked to analyze attacks against the company and implement contingencies that would ensure the safety of Tesla’s data.
Tesla’s listing specifies that the ideal candidate for the Security Engineer post should specialize in security monitoring, incident response, as well as forensics to defend the company’s “information, infrastructure, and products.” Experience in dealing with multiple security domains, intrusion detection, incident response, and malware analysis is also a requirement for the post.
The Security Engineer would be working as part of Tesla’s Detection Team, which would be responsible for addressing threats against the company at scale. The Security Engineer would also help in building and running a comprehensive threat detection program, as well as improvements to logging coverage, analysis, and alerting systems, to name a few. The key responsibilities of a Security Engineer are as follows:
- Analyze the latest attacker techniques and develop approaches to detect them across the company’s diverse environments and endpoints.
- Define, implement, and tune detective capabilities and data sources to detect and remediate malicious activity.
- Work with engineering and operations teams to implement threat detection signals, deploy new tooling, and improve response capabilities.
- Analyze security data and report on threats and incidents across various platforms and environments.
The new job posting comes as the company filed a lawsuit against former employee Martin Tripp, who allegedly admitted to committing sabotage by hacking the Tesla Manufacturing Operating System, stealing sensitive and confidential data and sending them to outside entities, and misreporting to the media. According to Tesla’s lawsuit, which was filed on a Nevada court on Wednesday, Tripp had acted against the company’s interests as a means of retaliation after an unsuccessful promotion attempt.
Tripp, on the other hand, has sternly denied Tesla’s allegations, claiming in a statement to the Washington Post that he is being singled out for being a whistleblower. Tripp denies Tesla’s allegations that he hacked into the company’s systems, stating that he doesn’t have the “patience for coding.” Tripp also denied the Elon Musk-led company’s claims that he acted out against Tesla after a failed promotion, stating that he could “literally care less.” Addressing the lawsuit recently filed against him, Tripp alleged that he only shared confidential company data to outside parties because he was attempting to warn investors and the public about Tesla’s unsafe practices.
Tripp’s actions against the company were teased by Elon Musk in an email to Tesla’s employees sent over the weekend. The message, which did not identify Tripp by name, stated that Tesla had been a victim of “extensive and damaging sabotage.” In a recent Twitter conversation with Ars Technica reporter Cyrus Farivar on Twitter, Musk noted “there is more” to the sabotage he was referencing in his leaked email, stating that “with 40,000 people, the worst 1 in 1000 will have issues,” translating to roughly ~40 employees with ill intentions against Tesla.
Investor's Corner
Tesla stock lands elusive ‘must own’ status from Wall Street firm
Tesla stock (NASDAQ: TSLA) has landed an elusive “must own” status from Wall Street firm Melius, according to a new note released early this week.
Analyst Rob Wertheimer said Tesla will lead the charge in world-changing tech, given the company’s focus on self-driving, autonomy, and Robotaxi. In a note to investors, Wertheimer said “the world is about to change, dramatically,” because of the advent of self-driving cars.
He looks at the industry and sees many potential players, but the firm says there will only be one true winner:
“Our point is not that Tesla is at risk, it’s that everybody else is.”
The major argument is that autonomy is nearing a tipping point where years of chipping away at the software and data needed to develop a sound, safe, and effective form of autonomous driving technology turn into an avalanche of progress.
Wertheimer believes autonomy is a $7 trillion sector,” and in the coming years, investors will see “hundreds of billions in value shift to Tesla.”
A lot of the major growth has to do with the all-too-common “butts in seats” strategy, as Wertheimer believes that only a fraction of people in the United States have ridden in a self-driving car. In Tesla’s regard, only “tens of thousands” have tried Tesla’s latest Full Self-Driving (Supervised) version, which is v14.
Tesla Full Self-Driving v14.2 – Full Review, the Good and the Bad
When it reaches a widespread rollout and more people are able to experience Tesla Full Self-Driving v14, he believes “it will shock most people.”
Citing things like Tesla’s massive data pool from its vehicles, as well as its shift to end-to-end neural nets in 2021 and 2022, as well as the upcoming AI5 chip, which will be put into a handful of vehicles next year, but will reach a wider rollout in 2027, Melius believes many investors are not aware of the pace of advancement in self-driving.
Tesla’s lead in its self-driving efforts is expanding, Wertheimer says. The company is making strategic choices on everything from hardware to software, manufacturing, and overall vehicle design. He says Tesla has left legacy automakers struggling to keep pace as they still rely on outdated architectures and fragmented supplier systems.
Tesla shares are up over 6 percent at 10:40 a.m. on the East Coast, trading at around $416.
Investor's Corner
Tesla analyst maintains $500 PT, says FSD drives better than humans now
The team also met with Tesla leaders for more than an hour to discuss autonomy, chip development, and upcoming deployment plans.
Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) received fresh support from Piper Sandler this week after analysts toured the Fremont Factory and tested the company’s latest Full Self-Driving software. The firm reaffirmed its $500 price target, stating that FSD V14 delivered a notably smooth robotaxi demonstration and may already perform at levels comparable to, if not better than, average human drivers.
The team also met with Tesla leaders for more than an hour to discuss autonomy, chip development, and upcoming deployment plans.
Analysts highlight autonomy progress
During more than 75 minutes of focused discussions, analysts reportedly focused on FSD v14’s updates. Piper Sandler’s team pointed to meaningful strides in perception, object handling, and overall ride smoothness during the robotaxi demo.
The visit also included discussions on updates to Tesla’s in-house chip initiatives, its Optimus program, and the growth of the company’s battery storage business. Analysts noted that Tesla continues refining cost structures and capital expenditure expectations, which are key elements in future margin recovery, as noted in a Yahoo Finance report.
Analyst Alexander Potter noted that “we think FSD is a truly impressive product that is (probably) already better at driving than the average American.” This conclusion was strengthened by what he described as a “flawless robotaxi ride to the hotel.”
Street targets diverge on TSLA
While Piper Sandler stands by its $500 target, it is not the highest estimate on the Street. Wedbush, for one, has a $600 per share price target for TSLA stock.
Other institutions have also weighed in on TSLA stock as of late. HSBC reiterated a Reduce rating with a $131 target, citing a gap between earnings fundamentals and the company’s market value. By contrast, TD Cowen maintained a Buy rating and a $509 target, pointing to strong autonomous driving demonstrations in Austin and the pace of software-driven improvements.
Stifel analysts also lifted their price target for Tesla to $508 per share over the company’s ongoing robotaxi and FSD programs.
Investor's Corner
Tesla wins $508 price target from Stifel as Robotaxi rollout gains speed
The firm cited meaningful progress in Tesla’s robotaxi roadmap, ongoing Full Self-Driving enhancements, and the company’s long-term growth initiatives.
Tesla received another round of bullish analyst updates this week, led by Stifel, raising its price target to $508 from $483 while reaffirming a “Buy” rating. The firm cited meaningful progress in Tesla’s robotaxi roadmap, ongoing Full Self-Driving enhancements, and the company’s long-term growth initiatives.
Robotaxi rollout, FSD updates, and new affordable cars
Stifel expects Tesla’s robotaxi fleet to expand into 8–10 major metropolitan areas by the end of 2025, including Austin, where early deployments without safety drivers are targeted before year-end. Additional markets under evaluation include Nevada, Florida, and Arizona, as noted in an Investing.com report. The firm also highlighted strong early performance for FSD Version 14, with upcoming releases adding new “reasoning capabilities” designed to improve complex decision-making using full 360-degree vision.
Tesla has also taken steps to offset the loss of U.S. EV tax credits by launching the Model Y Standard and Model 3 Standard at $39,990 and $36,990, Stifel noted. Both vehicles deliver more than 300 miles of range and are positioned to sustain demand despite shifting incentives. Stifel raised its EBITDA forecasts to $14.9 billion for 2025 and $19.5 billion for 2026, assigning partial valuation weightings to Tesla’s FSD, robotaxi, and Optimus initiatives.
TD Cowen also places an optimistic price target
TD Cowen reiterated its Buy rating with a $509 price target after a research tour of Giga Texas, citing production scale and operational execution as key strengths. The firm posted its optimistic price target following a recent Mobility Bus tour in Austin. The tour included a visit to Giga Texas, which offered fresh insights into the company’s operations and prospects.
Additional analyst movements include Truist Securities maintaining its Hold rating following shareholder approval of Elon Musk’s compensation plan, viewing the vote as reducing leadership uncertainty.
@teslarati Tesla Full Self-Driving yields for pedestrians while human drivers do not…the future is here! #tesla #teslafsd #fullselfdriving ♬ 2 Little 2 Late – Levi & Mario
