Ottawa Citizen

Tesla stock continues on a tear, on track for over 50% climb

- ESHA DEY

Tesla Inc. is headed for its seventh-straight session of gains after Credit Suisse upgraded the electric-car company whose stock has been on a tear since its first-quarter delivery report.

Shares of the Model 3 makerrose about nine per cent at the close in New York, putting them on track for a more than 50 per cent climb in the course of its longest win streak since mid October.

The crisis brought about by the coronaviru­s pandemic has handed Tesla an edge over legacy automakers, Dan Levy, Credit Suisse’s analyst, said in a report Tuesday, in which he bumped his rating up to the equivalent of a hold.

“With the focus almost exclusivel­y on the ‘near’ for the auto industry, and combined with reduced liquidity/increased net debt levels, it raises question on how legacy players can maintain ample commitment to the ‘far’ (specifical­ly, electrific­ation),” Levy wrote. Tesla, on the other hand, “is solely focused on electrific­ation anddoesn’t have the dilemma of balancing a transition from ICE (internal combustion engine) to EV.”

Coronaviru­s-related market gyrations led Tesla shares to drop as much as 61 per cent from a record high on Feb. 19. The stock has been steadily advancing since the company reported better-than-expected first-quarter deliveries on April 2 and is back to the levels it was trading at in early March.

“There is some clear optimism from the bulls,” Wedbush analyst Dan Ives wrote to clients on Monday. China production and demand appear poised for a significan­t rebound and should be a key growth driver over the coming quarter, he said.

Even so, it is now a “virtual impossibil­ity” that Tesla will be able to reach its original annual delivery forecast of at least 500,000 units, according to Ives. Bullish investors are also looking past the shutdown of the company’s vehicle assembly plant in Fremont, Calif., which could last at least another month, he said.

Credit Suisse’s Levy also sees Tesla coming up short of its fullyear deliveries guidance and is now estimating the company will hand over about 400,000 electric vehicles to customers this year, down from his previous projection for 550,000.

He believes the company will emerge from the crisis with advantages over other automakers.

“It likely has a lead in batteries, its liquidity is improved and it has shown signs of improvemen­ts in basic auto execution,” Levy said.

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