Elon Musk Is Facing His Darkest Days as $134.7 Billion Vanishes and the Losses Keep Mounting

   

Elon Musk's Net Worth (2025) From Tesla, Twitter, PayPal, SpaceX

In what may be remembered as one of the most volatile stretches of his career, Elon Musk is enduring a dramatic downturn in both personal wealth and public perception. Once the world's richest man with a fortune peaking well over $400 billion, the Tesla and SpaceX CEO has now seen $134.7 billion wiped off his net worth in just a few short months — a reversal that speaks not only to Wall Street's shifting sentiment but also to the complicated intersections of politics, branding, and global economics.

On Monday, April 7, Musk’s net worth fell by an additional $4.4 billion, bringing his current fortune to $297.8 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. It marks the first time since November that his wealth has dropped below the symbolic $300 billion threshold, and the losses show no sign of stopping.

To put that into context: the man who once soared to the very top of the world’s richest list — powered largely by investor faith in Tesla’s tech-fueled growth narrative — is now facing his darkest days, not just financially but reputationally as well.

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The immediate catalyst behind this wealth erosion lies in the market’s reaction to President Donald Trump’s new wave of tariffs — a protectionist economic measure that has sent shockwaves through industries that were, ironically, once buoyed by Trump’s rise to power.

Tesla, which once benefited from pro-business sentiment during Trump's administration, now finds itself caught in a crossfire of global trade tensions. The electric vehicle giant's stock has tumbled more than 50% from its record highs set in mid-December, dragging Musk’s paper wealth down with it.

The broader markets weren’t spared either. Monday’s market rout saw a total of $271 billion erased from the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, making it the third-worst day in the index’s history.

Musk was the sixth-biggest loser of the day, but the trend across recent weeks has made him one of the most prominent financial casualties in 2025 so far.

Musk's declining fortune is not just a result of shifting macroeconomic tides — it’s also a consequence of his increasingly polarizing public image and his close alignment with Trump-era policies and rhetoric.

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After being one of Trump’s most high-profile tech advisers during his presidency, Musk became both a symbolic and literal target for protest. While his influence helped accelerate discussions on domestic manufacturing and innovation, it also positioned Tesla — once an emblem of environmental progress — as a divisive political symbol.

That has had real-world consequences. In recent months, there has been a surge of vandalism against Tesla showrooms, and social media has documented instances of Tesla owners actively distancing themselves from the brand, some even removing the Tesla emblem from their cars.

Potential buyers, meanwhile, appear increasingly wary of being associated with what they perceive as Musk’s political leanings.

It’s a stark shift for a company that once enjoyed near-universal acclaim among progressive tech enthusiasts and eco-conscious consumers.

The troubles now facing Tesla are as much about perception as they are about production. The EV maker, which led the market in innovation and performance for much of the last decade, now finds itself under siege from multiple fronts: rising competition from legacy automakers, tightening regulations in global markets, and a CEO whose personality continues to dominate headlines — often for the wrong reasons.

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Musk’s tendency to make off-the-cuff remarks on social media, engage in political feuds, or mock critics has alienated a growing swath of consumers who once viewed him as a visionary. The Musk brand, which once amplified Tesla’s value, is now increasingly seen as a liability.

And it’s not just public perception. Investors, too, are becoming wary. Tesla's valuation has long rested on forward-looking optimism — the belief that it’s not just a car company, but a tech company capable of disrupting multiple sectors.

That narrative is becoming harder to sustain amid real-world issues like supply chain disruptions, increased tariffs, and mounting PR challenges.

Musk has not stayed silent amid the fallout. Over the weekend, he voiced support for a “zero-tariff” system between the U.S. and Europe, advocating for what he called a true “free-trade zone.”

His brother and fellow Tesla board member, Kimbal Musk, went further, labeling Trump’s tariffs a “structural, permanent tax on the American consumer.”

“Even if he is successful in bringing jobs onshore through the tariff tax, prices will remain high,” Kimbal said in a public statement. “We are simply not as good at making all things.”

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These comments underscore a growing tension within Musk’s orbit: how to reconcile patriotic manufacturing goals with economic reality. The tariffs are ostensibly meant to protect American industries — but in practice, they’re raising production costs, slowing innovation, and putting additional strain on companies like Tesla that rely on global supply chains and international demand.

The question now is whether this is a short-term correction — or the beginning of a longer decline.

Musk has rebounded from adversity before. From early skepticism about Tesla’s viability to the near-collapse of SpaceX, he has made a career of proving doubters wrong. But this time, the obstacles are more complex: geopolitical turmoil, consumer backlash, regulatory headwinds, and an evolving competitive landscape that no longer guarantees Tesla a first-mover advantage.

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There’s also the matter of Musk's attention. With his time split between Tesla, SpaceX, Neuralink, and various ventures — not to mention his frequent social media escapades — questions remain about whether Tesla has the leadership focus it needs at a time of existential challenge.

Elon Musk is no stranger to drama — financial, political, or personal. But the scale and speed of this current downturn are extraordinary, even by his standards. A loss of $134.7 billion would be career-ending for almost anyone else. For Musk, it’s a reckoning.

What remains to be seen is whether he can reframe the narrative once more, restore investor and consumer confidence, and guide Tesla through this turbulent chapter. If not, the electric dream he helped ignite may continue to dim.