Tesla stock down 2%: why options traders are betting against TSLA

by Girls Rock Investing
Tesla slips as traders hedge before a key NHTSA FSD deadline, while weak demand signals and oil-driven market stress add pressure.

Tesla stock (NASDAQ: TSLA) slipped about 2% on Friday, and the options market is leaning with the move, not against it.

For a stock that lives on momentum and belief, the tone in derivatives is clear: traders aren’t calling for a crash, but they are paying up to protect against more downside as Tesla grinds along a fragile support band around the mid‑$390s.

With a key US safety deadline just three days away and markets on edge after the Iran‑oil shock, a lot of active money would rather buy insurance than hope for the best.

The March 9 deadline traders can’t ignore

Front and center is the March 9 date circled on every TSLA options desk.

US safety regulators have given Tesla a hard deadline to hand over detailed Full Self‑Driving (FSD) data after earlier extensions tied to investigations into traffic violations and crashes involving its driver‑assist software.

In plain English: Tesla needs to show the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) exactly how FSD has behaved in the real world, and it needs to do it cleanly.

That binary risk is showing up on the tape.

Short‑dated put options, which are contracts that gain value if the stock falls, have seen heavier volume around the $390 and $370 strikes.

For many holders, this isn’t a “Tesla is going to zero” bet; it’s textbook hedging.

If NHTSA ramps up its probe or signals possible enforcement action after March 9, a 10–15% slide is an entirely plausible outcome.

If the deadline passes with a relatively benign response, those puts expire worthless and the cost gets chalked up as the price of sleeping at night.

Technically, the chart isn’t helping the bulls.

Tesla has been locked in a descending channel since its last major peak, with each rally stopping lower than the one before.

The stock has bounced off the $390 area twice this year, but each rebound has lacked follow‑through, a classic sign that dip‑buyers are getting tired.

When you combine a weakening uptrend with a big, date‑stamped regulatory event, you almost always see options traders tighten hedges rather than heroically add leverage.

Also Read: Top reasons Tesla stock price may crash to $350

Tesla stock: Weak demand and macro selling

The options tilt isn’t just about regulators.

It’s also about a business that suddenly looks more vulnerable on the demand side, at the same time, the macro backdrop has turned hostile.

On the company front, there’s growing evidence that Tesla’s brand is not as bulletproof as it once was.

US and European registration data have shown softer trends, and more than one analyst has started to link that to Elon Musk’s increasingly polarizing public persona and side ventures.

When the CEO is front‑page news for politics and meme coins, it risks alienating part of the customer base, especially in markets where buyers have plenty of EV alternatives.

That’s the kind of slow‑burn demand story options traders like to hedge rather than ignore.

Then there’s the macro gut‑punch.

The spike in oil above $90 a barrel, tied to escalating tensions around Iran, has jolted global markets.

Higher energy prices don’t automatically kill EV demand, but they do hit consumer confidence and feed recession fears.

At the same time, the Nasdaq has been under pressure, and high‑valuation names like Tesla are usually first in line when investors start cutting risk.

A stock priced heavily on future growth and autonomy dreams tends to trade poorly when the conversation swings back to inflation, rates and geopolitical risk.

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