A milestone for autonomous driving: the Dutch vehicle authority RDW (Rijksdienst voor het Wegverkeer) has become the first European authority to approve Tesla's Full Self-Driving (FSD) for public roads. The approval currently applies to the Netherlands but could serve as a precedent for other EU countries. What does this mean for Tesla's valuation?
What Exactly Was Approved?
The RDW approval covers Tesla FSD Version 13.2 for Model 3 and Model Y vehicles equipped with the current Hardware 4 camera setup. Specifically approved is "Supervised FSD" mode: the driver must keep hands on the wheel and eyes on the road, but can let the vehicle make steering, braking, and acceleration decisions.
In Europe, this corresponds to SAE Level 2+ — comparable to what Mercedes offers in the US and Germany with Drive Pilot (Level 3). It is not full autonomy, but it is the first step by a European regulatory body to explicitly approve Tesla FSD.
Tesla's Valuation: What's Already Priced In?
Tesla currently trades at a forward P/E of approximately 174x — an astronomical valuation for a company facing increasing competitive pressure in its core EV business (BYD, Volkswagen ID, Hyundai Ioniq). This premium assumes Tesla is more than a car manufacturer — specifically: an AI and autonomous technology company.
Analysts at ARK Invest estimate that the robotaxi business case at full scale could justify an enterprise value of $4–8 trillion — 5–10x the current market cap. But: this calculation assumes regulatory approvals arrive at scale.
What the Netherlands Deal Concretely Means
Three direct implications:
1. EU Precedent: EU type approvals work through mutual recognition. If the Netherlands (a country with strict safety standards and TÜV-equivalent processes) approves FSD, it increases pressure on other EU countries and facilitates the process there.
2. FSD Revenue Boost: In the EU, approximately 600,000 Tesla vehicles have the required HW4 hardware. FSD costs €4,900 one-time or €180/month in the EU. If 15% of eligible vehicles purchase FSD, that represents a one-time revenue boost of ~$430 million — or $162 million annually in the subscription model.
3. Software Margin Effect: FSD carries an estimated gross margin of 75–85% (nearly pure software margin). Every dollar of FSD revenue contributes disproportionately to earnings.
Comparison: Waymo and GM Cruise
Waymo (Alphabet): Operates genuine Level 4 robotaxis in San Francisco, Phoenix, and Austin. Has no consumer vehicle solution — a fundamental difference from Tesla. Waymo requires expensive sensor equipment (~$100k/vehicle), while Tesla uses only cameras (~$0 additional cost).
GM Cruise: Operations were suspended following a serious accident in 2023. GM has accumulated losses exceeding $10 billion. Cruise is a cautionary example of how quickly regulatory tailwinds can become headwinds.
Tesla's advantage: Data Moat. With over 5 billion FSD miles driven (end of 2025), Tesla holds the largest real-world data asset for supervised autonomous driving. Waymo and Cruise must train their models primarily on simulated data.
Risks: What Could Go Wrong?
Regulatory rollback: A serious FSD accident in Europe could revoke approvals. EU regulation tends to be stricter than US oversight (NHTSA). The "GDPR risk" for camera data has not been fully addressed.
Sales erosion: Tesla European sales fell 28% in 2025 — despite FSD progress. The core business is struggling, and without solid vehicle sales, there is no base for FSD adoption.
Valuation risk: At a forward P/E of 174x, there is no margin for error. If FSD rollout speed falls short of expectations, a significant correction is possible.
Earnings on April 22: The Next Catalyst
Tesla's Q1 2026 earnings on April 22 will be the decisive test:
- Revenue consensus: $23.2 billion (-4% YoY — due to weak European numbers)
- EPS consensus: $0.52 (vs. $0.71 in Q1 2025)
- FSD adoption rate: management will comment on EU activations for the first time
- Robotaxi update: timeline for Austin, TX launch (planned: Q2 2026)
Smart Money Position in Tesla
According to Q4 2025 13F filings, Smart Money is divided:
- Cathie Wood (ARK): Increased Tesla position to 12.4% of ARK Innovation Fund — with price target $2,600 by 2029
- George Soros Fund: Reduced Tesla position by 40% in Q4 2025
- Vanguard & BlackRock: Passive index funds hold steady (no active decision)
The division reflects fundamental uncertainty: Tesla is either the AI company of the decade or an overvalued car stock. The Netherlands approval is one data point in favor of the former — but nothing more than that.
Track Tesla's Smart Money flows in our Smart Money Tracker.
BMI Research Team, April 13, 2026 — PRO Exclusive Analysis