Tesla traders are pricing a 73% implied probability against Cybercab sales at $30,000 or less in 2026, driven by skepticism over Elon Musk's ambitious pricing and timeline claims from the October 10 "We, Robot" event, where he targeted under-$30,000 production before 2027. Historical precedents like Cybertruck delays and the canceled $25,000 Model 2 fuel doubts, as scaling unsupervised Full Self-Driving (FSD) autonomy faces steep regulatory hurdles from NHTSA and state authorities. Q3 earnings reaffirmed 2026 volume production goals but offered no prototypes or cost breakdowns, reinforcing trader consensus on likely price creep or postponement. Key catalysts ahead include FSD regulatory approvals and 2025 factory updates.
Resumen experimental generado por IA con datos de Polymarket · ActualizadoSí
$29,380 Vol.
$29,380 Vol.
Sí
$29,380 Vol.
$29,380 Vol.
“Cybercab” refers to the specific autonomous vehicle unveiled by Tesla in October 2024 under the Cybercab name, or a clearly designated successor product marketed by Tesla as the same vehicle model.
A qualifying retail customer must be a member of the general public purchasing the vehicle in a bona fide retail transaction under publicly available terms. Sales to employees, executives, family members, subsidiaries, internal entities, or for promotional, testing, or internal fleet purposes will not qualify.
The base purchase price refers to the vehicle’s listed retail price before taxes, registration fees, delivery fees, financing costs, or third-party incentives. Official Tesla discounts or manufacturer incentives count toward the base price.
Preorders, deposits, announced pricing targets, prototype deliveries, or internal fleet deployments will not qualify unless a completed retail sale meeting the above criteria occurs.
The primary resolution source will be official information from Tesla, however a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.
Mercado abierto: Feb 17, 2026, 8:07 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...“Cybercab” refers to the specific autonomous vehicle unveiled by Tesla in October 2024 under the Cybercab name, or a clearly designated successor product marketed by Tesla as the same vehicle model.
A qualifying retail customer must be a member of the general public purchasing the vehicle in a bona fide retail transaction under publicly available terms. Sales to employees, executives, family members, subsidiaries, internal entities, or for promotional, testing, or internal fleet purposes will not qualify.
The base purchase price refers to the vehicle’s listed retail price before taxes, registration fees, delivery fees, financing costs, or third-party incentives. Official Tesla discounts or manufacturer incentives count toward the base price.
Preorders, deposits, announced pricing targets, prototype deliveries, or internal fleet deployments will not qualify unless a completed retail sale meeting the above criteria occurs.
The primary resolution source will be official information from Tesla, however a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Tesla traders are pricing a 73% implied probability against Cybercab sales at $30,000 or less in 2026, driven by skepticism over Elon Musk's ambitious pricing and timeline claims from the October 10 "We, Robot" event, where he targeted under-$30,000 production before 2027. Historical precedents like Cybertruck delays and the canceled $25,000 Model 2 fuel doubts, as scaling unsupervised Full Self-Driving (FSD) autonomy faces steep regulatory hurdles from NHTSA and state authorities. Q3 earnings reaffirmed 2026 volume production goals but offered no prototypes or cost breakdowns, reinforcing trader consensus on likely price creep or postponement. Key catalysts ahead include FSD regulatory approvals and 2025 factory updates.
Resumen experimental generado por IA con datos de Polymarket · Actualizado
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Cuidado con los enlaces externos.
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