Tesla’s Technoking of Tumult Caps a Wild Quarter With Silence

The man who dominates discussion about the future of transportation has gone uncharacteristically quiet at the close of a manic quarter.

Even by Elon Musk’s high bar for bedlam, the last three months have been wild. Considering all that happened — Shanghai’s shutdown, another factory opening, the chaotic Twitter deal and job cuts at Tesla — it’s no wonder the technoking has hunkered down (he fired off his last tweet on June 21).

Tesla started this quarter with a bang, reporting deliveries of more than 310,000 cars in the prior three months. The company is expected to come up well short of that mark for the period ending in June, with several analysts calling for fewer than 250,000 units.

When Musk disclosed the supposedly passive stake he’d taken in Twitter in early April and soon thereafter bid $44 billion for the company, it signaled Tesla was on stable footing. Surely, the carmaker’s chief executive officer — who already had his hands full also running SpaceX, Neuralink and The Boring Company — wouldn’t add more to his plate if all was not well at his most valuable venture.