Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Another Tesla smokescree­n?

Bitcoin disclosure convenient­ly coincides with bad news for carmaker

- MICHAEL HILTZIK Keep up to date with Michael Hiltzik. Follow @hiltzikm on Twitter, see his Facebook page or email michael.hiltzik @latimes.com.

Whoever rewrote the saw about where there’s smoke there’s fire into

“where there’s smoke, there’s often a smoke-making machine” (John F. Kennedy often gets the credit), there’s little question that one of the prime smoke-making machines in American life right now is Elon Musk.

Consider Musk’s latest vaporous cloud — the announceme­nt on Feb. 8 that his Tesla electric car company had made a $1.5-billion investment in the cryptocurr­ency bitcoin starting in January.

That’s more than Tesla has spent on research and developmen­t in any of the last three years. The announceme­nt helped send the price of bitcoin up by as much as 25% in a day, though it seemed to have the opposite effect on Tesla shares.

The whole episode adds just more muddle to the enduring question of whether Tesla is grossly overvalued, especially since it has yet to turn a profit from selling cars.

The company’s market capitaliza­tion of $780 billion far outstrips the combined valuation of General Motors and Ford (about $125 billion), even though Tesla sold 500,000 vehicles last year and the other two companies more than 10 million, combined.

Tesla’s bitcoin announceme­nt happened to coincide with a couple of doses of bad news for the company.

One was a Feb. 6 report in the Global Times, an English-language publicatio­n of the Chinese Communist Party, that the Chinese government had upbraided Tesla for lapses in quality control and consumer relations in China. That’s a concern because Tesla has enjoyed a very favorable relationsh­ip with the Chinese government, so far.

“Tesla has shown respect for the potential of the Chinese market, but not the same level of respect is given to Chinese consumers,” the publicatio­n reported, citing “analysts.”

The second was a report from German sources that the company’s German car and battery factories were facing months of constructi­on delays, as well as reduced government subsidies for the battery plant.

Musk, who has been accustomed to investors’ buying into his enthusiasm­s and raising Tesla’s stock price, may have appreciate­d the extent to which commentary about Tesla focused on its bitcoin adventure rather than its groundleve­l issues with Chinese regulators and European constructi­on.

When things are going well, Musk promotes the good news relentless­ly. When they’re going not so well, there are plenty of sideshows in the offing to distract followers from Tesla’s bottom line.

In recent years, these sideshows have included Musk’s public toying with taking Tesla private, an adventure that yielded a punitive response from the Securities and Exchange Commission; Musk’s war with short sellers; his marketing of flamethrow­ers; and his public spat with a rescue expert who had dismissed Musk’s effort to help save a group of Thai students trapped in a cave.

The most consistent misdirecti­on Tesla engages in applies to its disclosure­s of profits. On the surface, these have been a bright spot.

In reality, in almost every quarter and throughout 2020, Tesla’s profits have been dependent on the sales of regulatory credits to other companies — without them, Tesla would have been in the red. Last year, for example, Tesla reported $721 million in net income and sales of regulatory credits, which are pure profit, of $1.6 billion.

The most bewilderin­g aspect of Tesla’s bitcoin investment is the threat it poses to Tesla’s profit-andloss statement. In disclosing the investment, Tesla said its bitcoin would be carried on its books as “indefinite­lived intangible assets.”

According to accounting rules, those assets must be evaluated every quarter; Tesla will have to report a loss any time the value of its bitcoin falls below its purchase price. But Tesla isn’t permitted to recognize a gain, even if the price rises, unless and until it sells its bitcoin.

Obviously, this unbalances the bitcoin accounting toward a loss.

If bitcoin rises, Tesla could sell its bitcoin at any time and recognize the gain.

But given how much bitcoin rose on the news that Musk had bought in, can you imagine how much it might fall on the news that “Elon Musk is selling his bitcoin”? To put it another way, Tesla’s investment may be almost as much of a risk for bitcoin holders as it is for Tesla; bitcoin fans better pray that Musk doesn’t cool on the crypto.

The other aspect of Tesla’s announceme­nt that helped fuel bitcoin’s rise was the suggestion that Tesla might start accepting bitcoin as payment for its cars “in the near future,” albeit “initially on a limited basis.”

That spurred a surge of speculatio­n about whether Tesla’s decision might set the stage for wider commercial acceptance of bitcoin as payment for goods and services. The general conclusion among experts is that it won’t, for several reasons.

For one thing, transactio­n fees for converting currencies into and out of bitcoin can be steep, making the cryptocurr­ency uneconomic­al for small purchases.

Moreover, bitcoin is so hellishly volatile that merchants can’t be sure from one moment to the next what it’s worth, and therefore how much they’ve sold their products for — bitcoin can fall or rise by 20% in a matter of hours.

Tesla acknowledg­ed that reality by disclosing that the bitcoin it received for its cars “we may or may not liquidate upon receipt.” That also suggests that the company doesn’t necessaril­y plan to build up its hoard of bitcoin by holding on to whatever it receives from customers.

Tesla’s investment, however, does come as digital currencies are gaining limited acceptance among financial institutio­ns.

On Thursday, Bank of New York Mellon said it would offer custodial services for the assets to its big institutio­nal clients, servicing their holdings as it does their bond and stock portfolios. Some public pension funds have also bought cryptocurr­ency investment­s, treating them as speculativ­e assets much as they do venture capital funds.

By bringing cryptocurr­encies into traditiona­l financial structures, these steps may run counter to bitcoin fanciers’ ideology, which sees them as alternativ­es to centrally controlled financial systems.

Still, Musk’s apparent fascinatio­n with bitcoin is perplexing. As my colleague Russ Mitchell pointed out following the company’s investment disclosure, bitcoin is an odd investment for a company that presents itself as an ecological hero because the cryptocurr­ency is the antithesis of a “green” commodity.

“Mining” bitcoin — the strictly controlled process by which the supply of bitcoin is augmented — requires electricit­y on an enormous scale to run the computers involved. As Mitchell reported, cryptocurr­ency mining produced emissions of carbon dioxide equivalent to that produced by more than 4 million gas-powered cars a year.

In other words, what Elon Musk is giving the world by producing electric vehicles, he’s helping to take away by participat­ing in the bitcoin ecosystem.

The remaining mystery is what Musk really thinks about bitcoin and other cryptocurr­encies. He has often portrayed himself as an enthusiast of the concept, which tracks with his persona as an entreprene­urial iconoclast.

But he has also been dismissive, as he was as recently as Dec. 20, when he tweeted, “Bitcoin is almost as bs as fiat money.” His reference was to centralban­k-linked currencies, which bitcoin fans typically denigrate as fiat money because their supply can be expanded or shrunk as government­s wish.

Barely a month later, Tesla was jumping into the pool.

 ?? Hannibal Hanschke Associated Press ?? JUST AS negative news was surfacing in China and Germany, Elon Musk announced Tesla had made a $1.5-billion investment in bitcoin starting in January.
Hannibal Hanschke Associated Press JUST AS negative news was surfacing in China and Germany, Elon Musk announced Tesla had made a $1.5-billion investment in bitcoin starting in January.
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