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Elon Musk hands over a Model Y car to a customer during the opening ceremony of the new Tesla Gigafactory for electric cars in Gruenheide, Germany, March 22, 2022.

Patrick Pleul | Pool | Via Reuters

Tesla CEO Elon Musk is now requiring employees to install and show customers how to use the latest version of the company’s premium driver assistance system, which is marketed as “FSD” or Full Self-Driving capability, before completing a vehicle delivery in North America.

“Going forward, it is mandatory in North America to install and activate FSD V12.3.1 and take customers on a short test ride before handing over the car,” Musk wrote in an email to staffers on Monday. “Almost no one actually realizes how well (supervised) FSD actually works. I know this will slow down the delivery process, but it is nonetheless a hard requirement.”

Bloomberg first reported on Musk’s email, which was also viewed by CNBC.

While all new Tesla vehicles have a standard driver assistance system installed called Autopilot, the company’s FSD option costs $199 per month for most customers in North America.

Tesla’s FSD system does not turn cars into autonomous vehicles. According to the Tesla owners’ manuals, drivers must remain attentive to the road and ready to steer or brake at any time when using FSD or FSD Beta.

Owners with FSD can also get access to the FSD Beta system, which allows them to test and help debug newer driver assistance features on public roads.

Under pressure from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Tesla has implemented voluntary recalls to improve the safety of its Autopilot, FSD and FSD Beta systems in recent years.

Tesla didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

In a separate memo distributed to staff at Tesla, the company is asking salaried and hourly workers to sign up for additional shifts to deliver cars to customers in the last days of the first quarter.

“Join us in delighting customers as they take delivery!” the memo said. “While our production capacity allows vehicle deliveries to be distributed more uniformly throughout the quarter, we still need your support to move, prepare and drive vehicles to customers throughout the end of Q1.”

Salaried Tesla employees do not receive extra pay if they work delivery shifts, but hourly employees are eligible for additional compensation, generally billing their hours to a sales and delivery cost center, according to the memo, which CNBC viewed.

Tesla is under pressure to avoid a drop in year-over-year deliveries for the first quarter. At least one independent researcher, who publishes as “Troy Teslike,” predicts Tesla will report just 407,000 deliveries for the quarter, which would mark a decline from 422,875 a year ago.

Tesla shares have declined about 30% this year, closing on Monday at $172.63.

WATCH: Analyst expects to see Tesla’s multiple continue to fall

Expect to see Tesla's multiple continue to fall, says Light Street's Glen Kacher

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CNBC Daily Open: Hopes of a U.S.-China deal spark a rally

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CNBC Daily Open: Hopes of a U.S.-China deal spark a rally

U.S. President Donald Trump and China’s President Xi Jinping shake hands before their bilateral meeting during the G-20 leaders summit in Osaka, Japan on June 29, 2019.

Kevin Lamarque | Reuters

The mere prospect of a U.S.-China trade deal is enough to send markets higher.

On Monday stateside, the S&P 500, Dow Jones Industrial Average and Nasdaq Composite closed at record highs — with the broader market index breaking past the 6,800 level for the first time.

And that’s before an agreement has been signed officially.

“A lot of the forecasts for technology have been without the benefit of China, so once you can add China back into the equation, that would probably be fairly optimistic for the markets,” Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist at CFRA Research, told CNBC.

Nvidia, for instance, gave an estimate for the current quarter that excludes H20 shipments to China — a reminder of how trade restrictions have complicated the outlook for U.S. tech giants.

A formal U.S.-China deal that clarifies — and perhaps loosens — trade parameters could prompt Big Tech companies to raise their guidance, potentially igniting another wave of buying in a market already dominated by tech heavyweights.

Beyond silicon and software, soybeans are back in play. Reports suggest China may ease its unofficial boycott of U.S. soybeans as part of the agreement. That would go some way toward assuaging Scott Bessent’s pain because he’s not just the U.S. Treasury Secretary, but also a soybean farmer, as he put it in a televised interview.

While Bessent meant that literally — he owns soybean farmland — in the broad trade war between China and the U.S., trade tensions have made daily life more difficult for most of us, turning us all into reluctant farmers of one kind or another. A truce, if it comes, might let everyone harvest some peace.

What you need to know today

Trump suggests an agreement with China is imminent. Speaking aboard Air Force One on Monday, Trump said he and Chinese President Xi Jinping are going to “come away with” a trade deal. The U.S. president also signaled a TikTok deal could come on Thursday.

Amazon is preparing to announce largest layoffs in its history. The cuts, which will impact almost every division, will begin Tuesday, according to a person familiar with the matter. Up to 30,000 employees will be affected, Reuters reported.

HSBC beats earnings expectations. Third-quarter profit before tax came in at $7.3 billion, higher than the $5.98 billion estimate compiled by the bank. However, that figure was 14% lower from a year earlier because of higher operating expenses.

Record highs for U.S. stocks. The three major U.S. indexes and the Russell 2000 rose Monday to close at all-time highs. Asia-Pacific markets slipped Tuesday. South Korea’s Kospi fell even as the country’s economy expanded more than expected in the third quarter.

[PRO] Time to put cash elsewhere when Fed cuts rate. The returns of money market funds depend on prevailing interest rates. When the Fed all but certainly cuts rates, investors should start moving their funds out of cash instruments, analysts say.

And finally…

President and CEO of Saudi’s Aramco, Amin H. Nasser, speaks during the Future Investment Initiative (FII) in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia October 29, 2024.

Hamad I Mohammed | Reuters

How Saudi Arabia is diversifying away from oil — and betting big on AI

According to Saudi Arabia’s Minister for Investment Khalid Al Falih, 50.6% of the Saudi economy is now “completely decoupled” from oil.

The country is doubling down on fast-growing sectors such as artificial intelligence for growth. Al Falih said the kingdom will be a “key investor” in developing AI applications and large-language models, adding that Saudi Arabia would also build data centers “at a scale and at a competitive cost not achieved anywhere else.”

— Lim Hui Jie

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Ark Invest CEO Cathie Wood flags AI market correction risk: ‘We think there will be a reality check’

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Ark Invest CEO Cathie Wood flags AI market correction risk: 'We think there will be a reality check'

Cathie Wood, chief executive officer of Ark Investment Management LLC, during the Federal Reserve’s Payments Innovation Conference in Washington, DC, US, on Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2025.

Aaron Schartz | Bloomberg | Getty Images

ARK Invest CEO Cathie Wood on Tuesday pushed back on fears of an artificial intelligence bubble, while flagging the possibility of a “reality check” on AI valuations.

Speaking to CNBC’s Dan Murphy on the sidelines of Saudi Arabia’s Future Investment Initiative (FII) in Riyadh, Wood said that as interest rates begin to rise, “there will be a shudder” in markets.

“We are going to reach a moment in the next year where the conversation will shift from lower interest rates to rising rates,” the closely watched investor said.

“There are a lot of people out there … who think that innovation and interest rates are inversely correlated. That is not true over history,” Wood said.

“I want to disabuse people of that notion. But nonetheless, the way algorithms work these days, we think there will be a reality check, shall we say.”

Her comments come amid concerns of soaring tech valuations as both businesses and investors pour money into the sector.

'I do not believe AI is in a bubble,' says Ark Invest's Cathie Wood

Wood is one of many business leaders to have waded into the AI bubble debate, particularly as AI-driven spending has led to record deals and valuations.

Earlier in the month, the International Monetary Fund and Bank of England became the latest financial institutions to warn that global stock markets could be in trouble if investor appetite for artificial intelligence turns sour.

IMF chief Kristalina Georgieva offered some blunt advice to investors at the time: “Buckle up: uncertainty is the new normal and it is here to stay.”

She joined the likes of OpenAI’s Sam AltmanJPMorgan boss Jamie Dimon and Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell in warning about the risk of a stock market correction as AI spending surges.

Wood: AI is not in a bubble

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OpenAI says U.S. needs more power to stay ahead of China in AI: ‘Electrons are the new oil’

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OpenAI says U.S. needs more power to stay ahead of China in AI: 'Electrons are the new oil'

Sam Altman, chief executive officer of OpenAI Inc., during a media tour of the Stargate AI data center in Abilene, Texas, US, on Tuesday, Sept. 23, 2025.

Kyle Grillot | Bloomberg | Getty Images

OpenAI on Monday said the U.S. needs to substantially ramp up its investment in new energy capacity if it wants to stay ahead of China in the race to develop artificial intelligence.

The startup has been inking deals for ambitious infrastructure buildouts in recent months that will require massive amounts of power. The sprawling data centers will push the boundaries of what is possible in the U.S. during a time when the electric grid is already under strain.

“Electricity is not simply a utility,” OpenAI said in a blog post Tuesday. “It’s a strategic asset that is critical to building the AI infrastructure that will secure our leadership on the most consequential technology since electricity itself.”

Read more CNBC tech news

OpenAI shared an 11-page submission with the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, in which it encouraged the U.S. to commit to building 100 gigawatts of new energy capacity each year.

A gigawatt is a measure of power, and 10 gigawatts is roughly equivalent to the annual power consumption of 8 million U.S. households, according to a CNBC analysis of data from the Energy Information Administration.

OpenAI said that China added 429 gigawatts of new power capacity last year, while the U.S. added 51 gigawatts. The company said this disparity is creating an “electron gap” that is putting the U.S. at risk of falling behind.

“Electrons are the new oil,” OpenAI said.

WATCH: OpenAI begins to threaten software stocks

OpenAI begins to threaten software stocks

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