In the interview, Altman described Musk as a "legendary entrepreneur" who did a lot to help OpenAI in its early days.
"He's also clearly a bully, and he's also someone who clearly likes to get into fights," added the OpenAI CEO, pointing to the billionaire's high-profile spats with Jeff Bezos and Bill Gates.
Altman also said he believes much of Musk's animosity is rooted in OpenAI's recent success and the fact that he now runs a direct competitor.
"Everything we're doing, I believe Elon would be happy about if he were in control of OpenAI," said Altman.
"He left when he thought we were on a trajectory to certainly fail, and also when we wouldn't do something where he had total control over the company," he added.
Altman's comments come as Musk prepares to occupy an increasingly prominent role in the second Trump administration. Though Musk will have an influential political position, Altman said he did not believe Musk would use his power to go after his rivals.
"I think there are people who will really be a jerk on Twitter who will still not abuse the system of the country," he said.
OpenAI and Musk did not respond to requests for comment, sent outside normal working hours.
However, Bezos praised Trump following an assassination attempt in July and said he was "very optimistic" about a second Trump term at the NYT's Dealbook conference earlier this month.
Musk wrote in a post on X last month that Bezos had told people they should sell Tesla and SpaceX stock because Donald Trump would lose the election, which the Amazon founder denied as "100% not true."
Blue Origin competes with SpaceX for lucrative NASA and federal contracts. In the leadup to the election, the billionaire came under fire overΒ The Washington Post's failure to endorse a candidate, with multiple reports suggesting Bezos made the decision to do so.
Amazon and Elon Musk did not respond to requests for comment, sent outside normal working hours.
Three of Japan's iconic car companies are struggling.
Toyota, Honda, and Nissan have seen sales in China slump, and now Nissan and Honda are considering merging.
Japanese automakers, which have prioritized hybrids, are facing pressure from China's EV giants like BYD.
Japan's iconic auto industry is going through a rough patch, and now two of its most important companies are considering merging as they fight for survival.
It comes after the two companies and major rival Toyota reported slumping profits in their most recent earnings, as they grapple with ferocious competition in China and a bumpy transition to electric vehicles.
All three companies face a similar problem; they are failing to sell enough cars in China.
Toyota's sales in China were down just over 10% in the first nine months of the year, with the company blaming "severe market conditions" such as "intensifying price competition."
Still, a Toyota spokesperson told Business Insider that its declining profits were not only attributable to China; it also saw weakness in Japan and North America.
Honda flagged a decline in sales in China in its most recent quarter, dragging down its total group sales. While Nissan reported a drop of over 5% in retail sales in China in the first half of the fiscal year β the largest drop of any of its regions.
Like other foreign automakers, Japan's car giants are being squeezed in China by local rivals. These rivals have rapidly gained market share by offering a range of affordable but high-tech EVs and hybrids.
"The real battle is happening in the emerging markets. And that's exactly where the Japanese car makers are suffering the most," said Munoz, pointing to the rapid expansion of the likes of BYD in Southeast Asia and Latin America.
"Japanese carmakers have a strong presence in Southeast Asia. And Southeast Asia right now is a hot market for Chinese cars," he said.
Electric woes
Japanese automakers have taken a broadly cautious approach to the transition to EVs, focusing instead on hybrid vehicles.
That approach has mostly paid off as EV demand has slowed, with Toyota reporting bumper profits on the back of strong hybrid sales in the US earlier this year.
However, Munoz said that while the hybrids-first strategy may have worked out in the US and Europe, it has created problems for Japanese automakers in China, leaving them without a strong lineup of EVs that can compete with local offerings that can cost less than $10,000.
"China is definitely shifting to fully electric. And this leaves out all of the car makers that are not competitive with their electric cars," said Munoz.
He added that Toyota, Honda, and Nissan are at risk of becoming overly dependent on US and European markets, which are experiencing stagnating growth while losing out in expanding markets like China.
"At the end of the day, the hybrid strategy worked in Japan, worked in the US, and worked very well in Europe, but that's not the case in China," he added.
There are signs that Japan's auto giants are changing their strategies.
Nissan has pledged to accelerate the introduction of new EVs in China and hybrids in the US, while Toyota is reportedly planning to expand production in China as it attempts to take on local firms.
A Nissan spokesperson told BI that the company is taking measures to meet the market's and customers' needs, including introducing new products.
They added that the US remains a priority market for Nissan, and that the company was expecting an increase in sales from new models.
Shares of the carmaker jumped after news of the potential merger with Honda broke, rising as much as 24% in early trading on Wednesday. Nissan's shares are down nearly 25% this year.
Speaking on an earnings call in November, Honda executive vice president Shinji Aoyama warned that Trump's proposed tariffs on vehicles imported from Mexico could have a huge impact on Japanese automakers, many of whom have factories in the country.
Honda did not respond to a request for comment, sent outside normal working hours.
The European Union has finalized plans to build a satellite network to rival Elon Musk's Starlink.
The $11 billion IrisΒ² network aims to provide high-speed internet to remote locations in Europe.
Musk has frequently clashed with European politicians and has faced scrutiny over Starlink's role in Ukraine.
Elon Musk's Starlink could have a new rival after the European Union confirmed it will join the race to provide high-speed internet to remote locations.
Starlink has also played a vital role in the war in Ukraine, with Ukrainian military forces relying on the service for military communications.
That reliance has caused tensions with SpaceX's billionaire owner. In September 2023, Musk said he had denied a request to activate Starlink in Crimea, thwarting an attack on Russia's Black Sea fleet.
The EU is not the only one building their own Starlink rival. Amazon is working on its own network of internet-providing satellites, called Project Kuiper, with the first satellites expected to be deployed next year.
SpaceX has submitted a petition requesting an election on incorporating the company's Starbase launch site as a city, according to a letter sent to local officials on Thursday.
Musk has been floating the idea of turning the launch site into a city for several years, with SpaceX first approaching officials in Cameron County, Texas, about the plan in 2021.
Holding an election to incorporate Starbase is the next step. In the letter to local officials, Starbase general manager Kathryn Lueders wrote that the goal of the site was to make South Texas "a gateway to Mars."
She said thousands of SpaceX employees work at the launch facility, with several hundred living on-site.
Reposting the letter on X, SpaceX founder Elon Musk said the "city of Starbase" will also be the site of the company's new headquarters.
The billionaire said the move was in response to a California law prohibiting rules requiring teachers to notify parents if a child changes their name, pronouns, or gender identity at school.
Musk has also frequently clashed with local regulators. SpaceX sued the California Coastal Commission after members criticized his political views and denied a request to increase the number of launches in the state.
SpaceX did not respond to a request for comment, sent outside normal working hours.
Tesla's director of engineering for Autopilot has left the company for robotaxi rival Zoox.
Zheng Gao becomes the latest senior employee to leave the automaker in a tumultuous year for Tesla.
Elon Musk laid off over 10% of the company in April and is trying to pivot Tesla toward autonomous vehicles.
Tesla's executive exodus is showing no signs of slowing down.
Zheng Gao, Tesla's director of engineering for Autopilot hardware and an eight-year veteran at the Elon Musk-run automaker is departing for rival robotaxi builder Zoox, the Amazon-backed company announced on Wednesday.
Gao, who led hardware design for Tesla's Autopilot assisted-driving system, is the latest senior employee to leave the company.
Four of CEO Elon Musk's direct reports previously announced their departures the week before Musk unveiled Tesla's Cybercab robotaxi in a glitzy Los Angeles event.
Those departures included Tesla's global vehicle automation and safety policy lead, Marc Van Impe, and Chief Information Officer Nagesh Saldi.
Musk has lost at least eight of his direct reports at the company this year.
Along with Google-backed rival Waymo, Cruise moved quickly to get its fleet of driverless Chevrolet Bolt robotaxis on the road.
Both companies got the green light from regulators to operate their robotaxis as a ride-hailing service in San Francisco in August 2023. Just months later Cruise was banned from operating in California after one of its driverless cars seriously injured a pedestrian.
Cruise restarted testing its self-driving technology earlier this year, and even announced a partnership with Uber to offer robotaxi rides on the Uber app in August, but that wasn't enough to stop GM from pulling the plug.
CEO Mary Barra cited "the considerable time and expense required to scale a robotaxi business in an increasingly competitive market" on a call with analysts.
John McDermid, professor of software engineering at the University of York in the UK, said: "I think it's a recognition of how challenging it is and how hard it is to make money in the robotaxi business. Even if you can solve the technical problems, it's a tough place to be."
Saber Fallah, professor of safe AI and autonomy and director of the Connected Autonomous Vehicle Research Lab at the UK's Surrey University, told Business Insider that Cruise had moved too quickly in deploying its driverless robotaxis at scale in San Francisco.
He said the AI technology underlying robotaxis such as Cruise's and the regulatory processes for certifying driverless cars were not advanced enough to ensure they could handle the kind of complex scenarios often found in urban environments.
Rivals may have 'better tech'
Analysts at Bank of America said in a Wednesday note: "We believe GM's move also potentially implies that other companies (Tesla & Waymo) have better tech and/or that the market may not be appealing for later entrants. Waymo is already offering a robotaxi service across several US cities and Tesla plans to launch its service in 2025."
Waymo has been by far the most successful, with the robotaxi startup now offering 150,000 paid rides a week and planning to expand into a host of cities next year.
Waymo has also faced regulatory scrutiny. It issued two recalls this year after incidents in which its robotaxis collided with a towed pickup truck and a telephone pole.
Amazon-backed Zoox, which has begun rolling out its toaster-shaped robotaxis in San Francisco and Las Vegas, is also facing regulatory investigations over two crashes involving its self-driving tech and whether its steering wheel-less robotaxis comply with federal safety rules.
Tesla's Cybercab is on the horizon
Tesla, meanwhile, has perhaps the most ambitious plans of all. In October Elon Musk unveiled the "Cybercab," an autonomous robotaxi with no steering wheel or pedals, in October.
Musk said the $30,000 vehicle would enter production in 2027, and that Tesla owners would be able to operate a fleet of Cybercabs as their own ride-hailing business.
Tesla also plans to have unsupervised fully-autonomous Model 3 and Y vehicles on the road in California and Texas next year.
Fallah said companies such as Tesla and Waymo looking to build robotaxi fleets were likely to face similar problems to Cruise.
"The idea of robotaxis that can be driven anywhere, anytime without human involvement is really more hype than reality," he said. "We need much more advanced AI in order to solve this problem."
Some industry players may be starting to agree. GM said it would switch its focus from robotaxis to advanced driver assistance systems that require driver supervision.
The service has launched in a host of new countries, including Chad, Mongolia, and Argentina, and has also become increasingly visible on planes and cruises.
Cloudflare said Starlink has seen rapid growth in areas with "pent-up demand" for alternative internet services. Traffic in Georgia and Paraguay, where Starlink launched in November and December 2023, has increased by 100 and 900 times this year, respectively.
SpaceX is reportedly in talks to sell shares in a deal that would value the NASA contractor at around $350 billion. This would make SpaceX one of the most valuable private companies on the planet and double its $175 billion valuation at the end of 2023.
EV startup Rivian was ranked as the worst vehicle brand for reliability, while Tesla was voted the 6th least reliable of the 22 major brands surveyed.
Japanese brands Subaru, Lexus, and Toyota led the rankings, which are based on surveys of around 300,000 vehicle owners.
Percieved unreliability hasn't affected Tesla and Rivian owner's enjoyment of their vehicles, however.
86% of the Rivian owners surveyed by Consumer Reports said they would buy their Rivian EV again, giving it the highest owner satisfaction rating of any brand surveyed.
Tesla was not far behind, with 72% of owners saying they would buy their vehicle again.
In April, Tesla recalled almost 4,000 Cybertrucks over fears the accelerator pedal could become jammed at full throttle.
Consumer Reports found that conventional hybrids remain more reliable than EVs and plug-in hybrids, which had 42% and 70% more problems on average than combustion engine vehicles and hybrids, respectively, according to owners surveyed.
Rivian and Tesla did not respond to requests for comment from Business Insider, sent outside normal working hours.
General Motors expects to take a hit of more than $5 billion on its struggling China business.
The automaker said it would write down the value of its Chinese operations by as much as $2.9 billion.
GM and other foreign automakers have been hit hard by the rise of Chinese rivals such as BYD.
General Motors is set to take a hit of more than $5 billion on its operations in China amid an onslaught of competition from local rivals.
The Detroit automaker said on Wednesday that it would write down the value of its joint venture with SAIC Motor by as much as $2.9 billion and incur a further $2.7 billion in charges as it looks to restructure the China business.
The restructuring costs would include charges for plant closures and portfolio optimization, the majority of which the automaker expects to record before the end of the year.
GM's Chinese operations lost $347 million in the first nine months of the year.
The company said in a statement: "We expect our results in China in 2025 to show year-over-year improvement as a result of the actions our SGM joint venture is taking to make the business sustainable and profitable."
Shares fell 1.3% in premarket trading, but the stock is up almost 50% this year.
The announcement has come as foreign automakers face rising pressure in China's brutally competitive auto market from local rivals. Sales for the likes of BYD are booming because of their affordable EV and hybrid options.
Conversely, European manufacturers such as BMW and Mercedes-Benz have reported slumping sales in recent months.
Japanese automakers such as Toyota and Nissan are also struggling to maintain market share in the world's largest auto market, with analysts previously telling Business Insider they were suffering because of an underwhelming lineup of EVs.
GM has tried to adjust its strategy in China as a result of the growing demand for EVs and hybrids.
Sales in China rose 14% in the third quarter of 2023, its best result since 2022, with CEO Mary Barra praising the success of Buick's GL8 plug-in hybrid luxury minivan.
Barra said in October that the number of companies selling EVs in China was driving an unsustainable price war.
China's EV companies are turning to hybrids, which are becoming increasingly popular with drivers.
Tesla rivals such as Zeekr plan to launch their first hybrid models.
Hybrids could help them avoid European tariffs on Chinese EVs.
China's Tesla rivals have a new trick up their sleeve: hybrids.
China is the world's largest electric vehicle market in terms of sales. But many of its battery-powered pioneers are now turning to hybrids and extended-range vehicles as they vie for a slice of a highly competitive market and expand overseas.
Xpeng, which rivals Tesla in EVs andΒ humanoid robots, recently unveiled its Kunpeng Super Electric System, a new powertrain system that Xpeng says will allow future vehicles to travel 1,400 kilometers (870 miles) without stopping to charge or refuel. It's unclear when it will launch new models with this technology, though its first hybrid model could arrive early next year.
Rival Zeekr also plans to release its first hybrid, an SUV, in the second half of 2025.
There's a reason these companies are abandoning their all-electric strategy: hybrids and extended-range vehicles are becoming increasingly popular in China β and could make it easier for Chinese EV makers to dodge tariffs overseas.
Tu Le, managing director of consultancy Sino Auto Insights, told Business Insider that China was now "well past the first movers" when it comes to battery electric vehicles.
That has led EV companies to increasingly target customers with limited access to charging infrastructure who may be more skeptical of pure battery-powered vehicles. "There's a huge market for those people," Le said.
He added that diversifying into hybrids made financial sense for EV startups still searching for profits, as hybrids and extended-range vehicles are generally cheaper to produce than battery electric equivalents due to their smaller batteries.
Above all, Le said the likes of Xpeng and Zeekr did not want to miss out on the booming popularity of hybrids.
"They've seen the success BYD has had. BYD basically gives you a full menu βΒ they have offerings at $10,000, $15,000, $30,000 on battery electric or hybrid. That's a compelling reason to buy a BYD," he said.
Overseas ambitions
There are other advantages to selling hybrids, especially for Chinese manufacturers with one eye on overseas expansion.
This expansion push has increasingly encountered hurdles as Western nations have imposed trade protections to protect their auto industries from a wave of cheap Chinese EVs.
The new EU tariffs, however, do not apply to hybrids, giving China's EV upstarts a crucial opening.
BYD is already looking to take advantage, with president Stella Li telling Autocar the company was planning to launch three hybrid models in Europe next year alongside three battery EVs.
Fellow EV maker Nio, meanwhile, is reportedly developing its first hybrid model exclusively for the overseas market.
Auto experts have said that European tariffs could ultimately boost imports of plug-in hybrids. S&P Global Mobility analyst Ian Fletcher recently wrote that Chinese automakers are likely to replace some pure EVs in Europe with more hybrids and petrol vehicles.
"I think BYD is going to go to town on the lack of a higher tariff on plug-in hybrids in Europe," said Le. "And the Europeans are going to eat up plug-in hybrids, full stop."
BYD, Zeekr, and Nio did not respond to requests for comment from Business Insider.
DOGE is set to examine multibillion-dollar federal loans to two Tesla rivals.
Vivek Ramaswamy said the cost-cutting body would "carefully scrutinize" loans to Stellantis and Rivian.
There are concerns Musk may use his role to interfere with his companies' rivals, and regulators.
Vivek Ramaswamy said DOGE would investigate a federal loan worth about $7.5 billion to a Tesla rival.
The Biden administration said Monday it would help finance two battery factories in Indiana being built in a joint venture involving the Jeep owner Stellantis and Samsung.
The announcement provoked a furious reaction from one of the incoming Trump administration's chief cost-cutting advisors.
Vivek Ramaswamy, who was tapped to lead the Department of Government Efficiency alongside Tesla CEO Elon Musk, called the Stellantis loan "illegitimate" and said it should be rescinded.
The former Republican presidential candidate, who has been one of Donald Trump's most vocal supporters, also criticized a $6.6 billion loan to help finance a Rivian electric-vehicle plant in Georgia, which was announced last week.
"DOGE will carefully scrutinize every one of these questionable 11th-hour transactions, starting on Jan 20," he wrote on X.
Announcing the loan, the Department of Energy said the Stellantis-Samsung factories would support up to 2,800 jobs once operational and hire 3,200 workers during construction.
Rivian and Stellantis, which owns brands such as Dodge and CitroΓ«n, both compete with Tesla in the US market.
Musk has already signaled his support for cutting the $7,500 tax incentive for new EVs, a move The New York Times said the incoming Trump administration was considering.
The Tesla CEO and analysts have both said that scrapping the tax credit would disproportionally affect Tesla's rivals, including legacy automakers such as Ford and General Motors as well as EV startups like Rivian and Lucid.
Musk and Ramaswamy aim to cut about $2 trillion in government spending and slash the federal workforce through DOGE, which is planned to be an advisory group, not a government department.
DOGE and the Department of Energy did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The company has benefited from the booming popularity of its hybrid vehicles.
Sales of plug-in hybrids have risen nearly 70% this year from 2023, with BYD releasing new technology over the summer that it says allows its latest hybrids to go up to 1,250 miles without stopping for gas or charging.
BYD's success has heaped the pressure on Tesla, which has been fighting the Chinese company for the title of the world's largest EV producer.
However, the US carmaker will need a record quarter in Q4 to do that. Tesla has sold 1.29 million cars so far this year.
Tesla is fighting hard to meet that lofty goal, offering a string of end-of-year deals, including free Supercharging and Full Self-Driving trials to US customers.
While Tesla, which doesn't sell hybrids, has no chance of matching BYD's total vehicle sales, the race to sell the most EVs is still on. BYD has sold 1.56 million battery-electric vehicles this year so far.
Stellantis is facing more upheaval after CEO Carlos Tavares resigned on Sunday.
The Jeep and Chrysler owner is battling sliding sales and fierce competition from Chinese rivals.
Analysts say Stellantis' problems are unlikely to be solved anytime soon.
The owner of Jeep and Chrysler is facing further upheaval after its CEO departed on Sunday.
Shares in Stellantis fell by almost 9% in Milan on Monday after Carlos Tavares, who had been due to step down in 2026, announced he would leave immediately. The stock has now fallen 45% this year, valuing the company at about $36 billion β $8 billion less than Ford.
Tavares has had a bumpy ride at the head of the company that owns brands such as Jeep, Chrysler, and RAM as well as European carmakers Fiat and Peugeot β and analysts warned his exit was unlikely to solve any of Stellantis' many problems.
"Although not a surprise, the early and immediate departure of CEO Carlos Tavares leaves the group without leadership at a time of critical decisions on brand management to reverse market share loss and excess industrial capacity in Europe and North America," wrote Jeffries analysts in a note on Monday.
Here are some of the many speed bumps facing whoever succeeds Tavares in one of the auto industry's toughest jobs:
Tavares trimmed product lineups at Stellantis' US brands during his time as CEO, but the decision to discontinue so many models appears to have left the company out of step with consumer demand.
Jeep, Chrysler, and Ram all have an oversupply problem, with the three brands having more than 100 days of supply at the end of summer compared to the industry average of 77, according to Cox automotive data.
2. Union battles
Stellantis is facing an ongoing battle with the powerful United Auto Workers (UAW).
Stellantis has filed its own legal action against the UAW, accusing it of violating that contract with votes to authorize strikes.
The union welcomed Tavares' resignation, with president Shawn Fain criticizing the Portuguese executive's "reckless mismanagement" of the company in comments to The Detroit Free Press.
3. Competition from China
Like its rivals, Stellantis is under pressure from a wave of affordable Chinese EVs.
Speaking at an event on the sidelines of the Paris auto show in October, Tavares said the likes of BYD could produce EVs for about a third of the cost of their European rivals, and described competing with them as a "matter of survival."
Stellantis has partnered with China's Leapmotor to sell EVs outside China, but the company will still face stiff competition from Chinese upstarts eyeing expansion in Europe.
4. Stuttering EV sales in Europe
Stellantis sales are in free fall on both sides of the Atlantic, with Europe down 17% in the third quarter compared with last year.
It's been hit by slowing EV sales in Europe, with a lack of affordable models and the end of subsidy programs in markets such as Germany affecting demand.
Stellantis is suspending production at a factory in Italy as a result, and the company also announced it would shut down a factory in the UK amid concern over EV sales targets in Britain.
5. Trump tariffs
Trump's election victory poses peril for automakers in the US and abroad, and Stellantis is no exception.
The president-elect has floated tariffs on European companies that could affect Stellantis' European brands.
Such charges could have a huge impact on Stellantis, which has about a third of its full-size pickup truck production in Mexico, according to Morningstar analyst David Whiston.
Stellantis did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.
The money is distributed through two programs: the National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure (NEVI) program, which apportions $5 billion out to individual states over five years to deploy EV chargers initially on highways, and the $2.5 billion Charging and Fueling Infrastructure (CFI) grant program.
A spokesperson for the Department of Transportation told Business Insider that $2.4 billion of the funding for the NEVI program had been approved so far.
As of late November, 37 states had received approval for a third round of funding under the program, the department said, unlocking an additional $586 million for the 2025 fiscal year.
Funds for the additional 13 states plus DC and Puerto Rico are expected to be approved before the end of the year.
Kelsey Blongewicz, a policy analyst at Atlas Public Policy, told Business Insider that if those funds are released before Trump takes office on January 20th, as they have been in previous years, then it is unlikely the new administration could revoke them.
"If that funding is released before then, in theory, it is safe," Blongewicz said.
"It would be not impossible, but very hard for the new administration to claw that back," she added.
The clock is ticking
If the funding is approved, an estimated $3.3 billion of the total pot for the NEVI program will be committed, according to a Department of Transportation breakdown, effectively putting it beyond the reach of the Trump administration.
The Biden administration has also awarded over $1.3 billion of the $2.5 billion in funding for the CFI program so far, according to the Department of Transportation, with bidding for another $779 million in grants currently open.
Blongewicz said that the new administration will likely be able to take steps to slow down or frustrate the rollout of those remaining funds, especially for the competitive grants of the CFI program.
"All midnight-hour expenditures & new regulations will get special scrutiny and should be rescinded where appropriate," he wrote in a post on X in late November.
A patchwork solution
The NEVI and CFI programs, introduced as part of the $1.2 trillion Bipartisan Infrastructure Law in 2021, were key pillars of the Biden administration's plan to build a national network of EV chargers.
The DoT says that over 24,700 federally funded chargers are "underway" across the country, but only 31 NEVI-funded charging station sites are currently operational, according to the program's latest quarterly update.
A DoT spokesperson said the department expects to have hundreds of federally funded chargers operational this year, with thousands more coming in 2025.
Blongewicz said the loss of federal support would be a blow to the development of a national EV charging network, and EV charging startup executives told BI the question marks over funding were already fuelling uncertainty in the industry.
"We had this big, clear framework, and that is all going to go down now," Tiya Gordon, cofounder and COO of Brooklyn-based urban charging startup ItsElectric, told BI.
"A lot of the funds that have already been awarded are protected and out there in the world. With the other funding that has yet to be deployed, there is definitely a lack of clarity right now in terms of what can happen," she added.
Carter Li, CEO and cofounder of EV charging startup SWTCH, said that it was likely that much of the initiative for building America's charging network would move to the states.
"I suspect that if there is a drop in terms of federal incentive dollars, we will potentially see a pickup at state level. That's something we saw in the last Trump administration as well," he said.
That raises the prospect that Americans will have to deal with a fragmented landscape when it comes to buying and charging their EVs, which could put consumers off from going electric.
"Adoption of electric vehicles will slow because of the fact that there's be conflicting messages that are happening on a government level versus on a business or a consumer level," said Gordon.
"We're going to have a more state-by-state solution rather than a national solution," she added.
Videos circulating on social media showed Musk, who has been regularly spotted at Trump's resort base and is reported to be playing a role in selecting the incoming president's cabinet picks, attending the event alongside his mother, Maye, and the actor Sylvester Stallone.
Musk posted on X that he discussed Stallone's 1993 film "Demolition Man" with the actor, as well as taking part in a rendition of "YMCA," a staple at Trump's campaign rallies.
I was telling @TheSlyStallone that I just watched Demolition Man again and how well it predicted the crazy woke future 30 years ago! https://t.co/3wlYgdJus4
Along with his fellow DOGE head, Vivek Ramaswamy, Musk has floated mass layoffs of federal workers and suggested the new administration should "delete" a federal agency set up to help prevent another financial crisis.
The billionaire and his mother dined with Trump's family members, including his wife, Melania, and youngest son, Barron.
Elon Musk, Donald Trump, Barron and Melania blasting YMCA at Mar-a-Lago on Thanksgiving
The Facebook cofounder doesn't appear to have made any mention of the visit on his own social-media platform Threads.
Zuckerberg has had a rocky relationship with Trump, who threatened to jail Zuckerberg earlier this year if he was reelected.
The Meta chief previously described Trump's reaction to an assassination attempt in July as "badass" and congratulated the former president on his "decisive victory" after the election.
The Biden administration is set to loan Rivian $6.6 billion to finish an EV factory in Georgia.
Vivek Ramaswamy criticized the move as a "political shot across the bow" at fellow DOGE boss Elon Musk.
President-elect Donald Trump has tapped Musk and Ramaswamy to help cut government spending.
Rivian secured a vital loan from the outgoing Biden administration β and one of the leaders of DOGE isn't happy about it.
The Tesla rival was granted a $6.6 billion loan from the Department of Energy to restart construction of a stalled electric vehicle factory in Georgia, which the government said would create 7,500 jobs by 2030.
Vivek Ramaswamy, who is set to lead the "Department of Government Efficiency" along with Elon Musk in the second Trump administration, criticized the loan in a post on X.
"One 'justification' is the 7,500 jobs it creates, but that implies a cost of $880k/job which is insane," wrote Ramaswamy. "This smells more like a political shot across the bow at Elon Musk and Tesla."
A Department of Energy spokesperson said the Advanced Technology Vehicles Manufacturing Loan Program, which the Rivian deal is part of, reinforced America's position as a global automotive powerhouse.
They said the program also loaned $465 million to Tesla in 2010, which the company repaid early, as evidence of its success.
Musk and Ramaswamy have said they aim to cut about $2 trillion in government spending and slash the federal workforce through DOGE, which will not be an official government department.
The pair's mandate to "slash excess regulations" has raised fears that Musk may be tasked with shaking up regulatory agencies that oversee and have frequently clashed with his companies.
The Biden administration has attempted to boost electric vehicle adoption with a series of policies in recent years. They include tax incentives of up to $7,500 for new EVs made in the US, and $7.5 billion in federal grants to build hundreds of thousands of EV chargers by 2030.
Much of that spending is expected to be rolled back under Trump.
The new administration is reportedly set to scrap the $7,500 tax credit, a move that economist Felix Tintelnott told Business Insider could lower EV sales in the US by up to 27% in the short to medium term.
The Biden administration is also attempting to finalize funding for infrastructure and the US microchip industry before its term ends. , The Commerce Department said on Tuesday that Intel will receive about $7.9 billion in federal grants under the CHIPS Act.
Ramaswamy warned that DOGE will attempt to scrutinize these grants too, criticizing them as "11th-hour gambits" in another X post.
The Department of Energy did not respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.
Figures released on Thursday showed that vehicle production has dropped dramatically in all of Nissan's major markets this year except Mexico, where it rose nearly 10% compared to 2023. Overall, global production was down 7.1% in the first 10 months of 2024 compared to the previous year.
Experts previously told Business Insider that any tariffs on trade with Mexico would have a dire impact on the US auto industry and likely increase vehicle prices.
Nissan would be one of the automakers worst-hit by the tariffs. The company has four production sites in Mexico, where it makes models including the Sentra, Versa, and Kicks.
Nissan's global sales in October were down nearly 2.7% from the previous year. The carmaker recorded double-digit drops in both China and Europe but saw sales rise in the US for the first time in three months.
The looming threat of tariffs adds to Nissan's considerable list of problems.
The automaker announced earlier this month that it wouldΒ cut 9,000 jobs and 20% of its manufacturing capacity. Profit for the quarter ending in September fell to around $210 million, down from $1.4 billion over the same period last year.
Nissan is reportedly searching for extra investors after European partner Renault sold some of its holdings. A senior official close to the companyΒ told The Financial Times that Nissan has "12 or 14 months to survive."
Japan's automakers face a reckoning
Along with rivals Honda and Toyota, Nissan has come under pressure from Chinese automakers. These companies are eating into Nissan's market share in China with affordable EVs andΒ rapidly expanding intoΒ developing markets dominated by Japanese companies.
Toyota, Honda, and Nissan are also facing a reckoning over their handling of the transition to electric vehicles. The three automakers have prioritized hybrids over pure battery-electric vehicles, a strategy that has boosted sales in the US but left them lagging behind local rivals like BYD in China.
"At the end of the day, the hybrid strategy worked in Japan, worked in the US, and worked very well in Europe, but that's not the case in China," analyst Felipe Munoz previously told Business Insider.
Nissan did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider, sent outside normal working hours.
China's brutal EV battle shows no signs of letting up.
BYD is asking suppliers to cut prices and Tesla is rolling out more discounts.
The price war is putting some smaller Chinese players under financial pressure.
BYD and Tesla have been playing a game of how-low-can-you-go on EV prices in China for the past year, and they don't seem to be slowing down anytime soon.
The rivals are asking suppliers to cut prices and rolling out discounts as they prepare for another round in an ongoing EV battle.
After Bloomberg reported on a leaked email that appeared to be asking an unnamed supplier to cut prices by 10% from January, a BYD executive said it was asking suppliers about price reductions.
"Annual price negotiations with suppliers are a common practice in the automotive industry," wrote BYD public relations and branding general manager Li Yunfei in a post on Chinese social media site Weibo.
"Based on large-scale purchases, we set price reduction targets for suppliers. This is not a mandatory requirement and we can negotiate and move forward."
The move is the latest sign that China's price war, which has seen the price of new vehicles plummet as local and foreign automakers vie for a bigger slice of the country's EV and hybrid markets, is set to enter a new phase.
Tesla's sales in China have suffered recently, with shipments from the company's Shanghai factory falling 23% in October from September.
Tesla is coming under pressure from smaller rivals such as Zeekr and Xpeng, which have both launched rivals for the Model 3 and Y this year, as well as its lack of hybrids that have proven increasingly popular in China.
Analysts previously told Business Insider BYD was cashing in on its strong hybrids lineup, with hybrid sales rising by 62% year-on-year.
The race to the bottom on price, which has seen some Chinese automakers offer EVs for as little as $10,000, has strained the finances of some smaller EV startups.
Donald Trump has vowed to hit Mexico with a 25% tariff, which would affect automakers including Tesla.
Tesla announced plans in 2023 for a $10 billion factory in Mexico, whose future remains uncertain.
Analysts said tariffs on cars imported from Mexico would have dire consequences for US automakers.
President-elect Donald Trump said he would impose sweeping tariffs on Mexico β and that could be a problem for Tesla, whose CEO is one of Trump's most vocal supporters.
The announcement, on Truth Social, comes after Trump floated imposing tariffs of 200% or more on vehicles imported from Mexico during the election campaign.
The Mexican peso fell over 1% against the dollar on Tuesday following Trump's post.
The threat of tariffs on Mexico has also put a $10 billion new factory proposed by Elon Musk in limbo.
Tesla announced in March 2023 that it was planning to build a gigafactory near the industrial hub of Monterrey, Mexico.
The project has since been hit by delays and uncertainty, with Musk telling investors earlier this year that it was on pause until the election outcome was clear.
"Trump has said that he will put heavy tariffs on vehicles produced in Mexico, so it doesn't make sense to invest a lot in Mexico if that is going to be the case," the Tesla CEO said in July.
Musk backed Trump's election campaign and has been given a role to target wasteful government spending. The world's richest person praised Trump's proposed tariffs on Mexico and China in an X post on Monday, saying they would be "highly effective."
Trump's victory has pushed Tesla's project even further into purgatory. Mexico's economy minister said earlier this month he planned to set up a meeting with Musk to clarify the factory's status.
During the campaign Trump vowed to clamp down on automakers building cars in Mexico. The prospect of new tariffs could force US automakers such as Tesla to make some hard choices about operational or planned factories in Mexico.
Investment bank UBS warned that any tariffs on Mexico would be "highly disruptive" to the entire US automotive industry, in an analyst note released after the election. Analysts told BI that the tariffs floated by Trump would deter automakers such as Tesla from investing south of the border.
"Everything's up in the air with Tesla's plant," said Sam Fiorani of AutoForecast Solutions. "Depending on the level of the tariffs, it could complicate the investment in Mexico."
A looming crisis
Fiorani told BI that factories in Mexico were crucial for US manufacturers β particularly the Detroit "Big Three" of Ford, General Motors, and Jeep owner Stellantis β because it offered cheap parts and labor.
GM and Stellantis have around a third of their full-size pickup truck production in Mexico, according to Morningstar analyst David Whiston, while Ford builds its Maverick compact pickup there.
Mexico is also a crucial production hub for Ford's Mustang Mach-E EV, built at the company's Cuautitlan plant.
The country's free trade agreement with the United States, which allows automakers to import vehicles across the border without duties and is up for review in 2026, has attracted other automakers outside the Big Three.
Toyota, the world's largest carmaker, announced in 2020 it would move production of its Tacoma pick-up from the US to Mexico, while Nissan and Volkswagen also have factories in the country.
Chinese EV giants BYD and MG, a brand owned by SAIC, have both announced plans to build factories in Mexico.
In September BYD denied reports that it put those plans on hold to wait out the election result.
BYD Americas head Stella Li told Reuters that Mexico was a "very relevant" market because the plant would make cars for local market rather than to export.
Some Mexican officials fear a BYD plant could provoke the new Trump administration, The Wall Street Journal reported.
Other automakers have expanded their presence in Mexico, despite the uncertainty of the election and the prospect of tariffs under a second Trump term.
Jeep is building its first EV, the Wagoneer S, at its Toluca plant in Mexico, per a breakdown of the company's 2024 manufacturing operations.
The CEO of Chrysler, another Stellantis brand, also recently confirmed it was expanding a factory in Mexico as a "relief valve" for US truck production, after the Journal reported the company was considering making its bestselling Ram 1500 truck south of the border.
Germany's BMW, meanwhile, is investing 800 million euros ($861 million) in expanding its factory at San Luis PotosΓ, Mexico. It's expected to the company's latest range from 2027.
"Imposing tariffs would be a deterrent. It would make it difficult if you're planning on exporting to the US," Stephanie Brinley, an automotive analyst at S&P Global, told BI. "It makes building a plant in Mexico more expensive and less attractive."
Costly dilemma
Brinley added that many automakers with a significant US presence had been operating in Mexico for decades, meaning it would be expensive as well as highly difficult to shift production in response to tariffs.
"That would be a massive investment issue ... it would probably require a staggering amount of money and would not be something they could do quickly. Changing that manufacturing footprint would take at least five years," she said.
Ultimately, Brinley said many US automakers may decide it's in their best interests to stay put, despite the tariffs β something that she said could lead to higher prices for Americans.
"That's where the tariff ends up hurting the consumer, because these companies are not going to just eat the tariff. Some, if not all of the cost would be passed on to consumers," Brinley said.
Tesla, GM, Ford, and Stellantis did not respond to requests for comment from BI.