Wall Street Lunch: Tesla Slips As Trump-Musk Feud Over Tax Bill Heats Up

Wall Street Breakfast
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Summary

  • Tesla faces stock pressure as Musk-Trump tensions fuel investor concerns over regulatory risks and government spending scrutiny under a potential Trump administration.
  • Fed signals no immediate rate cut as strong labor data supports a wait-and-see approach; easing still expected later in 2024, likely starting in September.
  • Macau gaming stocks outperform expectations, while Kroger is highlighted as a top long-term pick with robust sales growth projected through 2026.
  • Wedbush remains bullish on tech, forecasting 10%+ gains in 2025, driven by a $2 trillion AI spending wave benefiting leaders like Nvidia, Meta, Microsoft, Palantir, and Tesla.

President Trump Holds Press Conference With Elon Musk in White House"s Oval Office

Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images News

Listen below or on the go on Apple Podcasts and Spotify

President Trump threatened Elon Musk’s ‘subsidies’ as Musk threatened a new political party. (0:15) Big jump in job openings support Fed pause. (1:33) Rise of the Amazon machines. (3:22)

This is an abridged transcript of the podcast:

Our top story so far, Trump and Musk are back at it.

Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) is under pressure after CEO Elon Musk and President Trump bickered again on social media about the government tax and spending bill.

Following some complaints from Musk about the financial danger of the tax and spending bill and a teaser on starting a new political party, Trump said that "Elon may get more subsidy than any human being in history, by far, and without subsidies, Elon would probably have to close up shop and head back home to South Africa." (Which may, in a curious way, remind some old school fans like me of Public Enemy’s “Incident at 66.6 FM.”)

For his part, Musk said: “Every member of Congress who campaigned on reducing government spending and then immediately voted for the biggest debt increase in history should hang their head in shame! And they will lose their primary next year if it is the last thing I do on this Earth.”

In a separate post, Musk, who spent around $290 million backing Trump and other Republicans in the 2024 election, said that if “insane spending bill passes, the America Party will be formed the next day”.

Weighing in on the spat, Wedbush Securities analyst Dan Ives said the Musk-Trump soap opera remains an overhang on Tesla's stock with investors fearing that the Trump Administration will be more hawkish and show scrutiny around Musk related U.S. government spending related to his companies, and most importantly, the regulatory environment key to the future of Robotaxis and Cybercabs.

On the economic front, Fed Chairman Jay Powell raised some eyebrows on Wall Street by using what some saw as language that puts the possibility of a July rate cut in play.

“I really can't say” if a July rate cut would be too soon, he said at the ECB Forum on Monetary Policy. "It depends on the data."

But T.S. Lombard economist Dario Perkins says: That was just a clumsy way of saying he didn't want to give any policy guidance.”

A "solid majority" of FOMC members expect to reduce rates later this year, Powell noted.

He added that the Fed will be watching “very carefully” for signs of unexpected labor market weakness. But today’s labor market data seemed to support the case for waiting, as the JOLTS report showed a second strong month in a row.

The number of job openings in the U.S. jumped to 7.769 million in May from 7.395 million in April, well ahead of the 7.32 million consensus.

In addition, the layoff rate fell to a very low 1.%.

Pantheon Macro says all told, “most FOMC members will see little reason to get behind emerging voices for a July easing after May’s JOLTS report. But the outlook likely remains for slowing growth in both wages and payrolls in the second half of this year, which we continue to think will steer the Committee to ease by 75bp by December, most likely starting in September.”

Among active stocks, Las Vegas Sands (LVS), Wynn Resorts (WYNN) and Melco Resorts & Entertainment (MLCO) saw strength as Macau gross gaming revenue jumped 19% year-over-year in May to $2.6 billion. The GRR mark topped the consensus expectation for a rise of 9.4% and represented 88% of the revenue mark from the pre-pandemic year of 2019.

And Kroger (KR) was named one of Evercore ISI's Best Core Ideas. The curated stock list is a compilation of the firm's top picks with a longer-term investment horizon.

Crucially, Kroger is also seen reaching 3% or higher in identical-store sales into 2026.

In other news of note, Amazon (AMZN) has deployed its one millionth robot to a fulfillment center in Japan, close to the number of humans working at its facilities, as the e-commerce giant continues to expand the world's largest fleet of industrial mobile robots.

Around 75% of the company's global deliveries are now assisted in some way by robotics, and its fleet spans more than 300 facilities worldwide.

According to a Wall Street Journal analysis, the average number of workers per Amazon facility last year - around 670 - was the lowest recorded in the past 16 years.

Meanwhile, they found that the number of packages shipped per employee each year increased since at least 2015 to about 3,870 from around 175, indicating productivity gains.

And in the Wall Street Research Corner, still the tech bulls, Wedbush says tech stocks as a whole are likely to rise 10% or more in the second half of 2025, thanks in part to AI.

The firm's top five picks are familiar names: Nvidia (NVDA), Meta Platforms (META), Microsoft (MSFT), Palantir (PLTR) and Tesla (TSLA).

Analysts said: “Our bullish view is that investors are still underestimating the tidal wave of growth on the horizon from the $2 trillion of spending over the next 3 years coming from enterprise and government spending around AI technology and use cases.”

“In our opinion after a relatively strong few months navigating tariff and geopolitical storms, now tech stocks are poised to see another 10%+ move higher in the second half of 2025 led by the tech winners in this 'golden age' for the tech world,” they added.

This article was written by

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