Day traders favor TSLL stock price setups when Tesla volatility exceeds 4%. Today’s conditions match that, leading to upticks in scalping strategies targeting 20–30 cent intraday gains. Adjusted earnings per share came in at 72 cents, outpacing the Zacks Consensus Estimate of 58 cents and improving from the year-ago earnings of 66 cents. Revenues increased 8% year over year to $25.18 billion but were below the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $25.57 billion. Earlier this month, Tesla returned to delivery growth in the third quarter after two consecutive quarters of decline and reported the third-largest quarterly number in the company's history. The return to growth shows that some of the incentives that Tesla had rolled out to boost demand are now paying off (read: Tesla Returns to Delivery Growth but Shares Slip: ETFs in Focus). Tesla’s chief executive, Elon Musk, offered an upbeat outlook for 2025. Musk expects vehicle sales to grow 20% to 30% next year and promised to launch an affordable vehicle, below $30,000 after subsidies, in the first half of 2025. Additionally, Tesla is working toward increasing production in the current quarter and said its new Cybertruck is on track to make a profit by the end of the year. Musk also reiterated that he expects Tesla to produce a robotaxi called Cybercab in 2026 and said the company will aim to make at least 2 million units annually. The Problem With Holding TSLL Too Long – Loss Recoupment & Volatility Risk Technical analysis on TSLL stock price reveals bullish signals as the 20-day moving average crossed above the 50-day. Historically, such patterns have preceded multi-week advances in leveraged ETFs.