Los Angeles Times

Is Tesla hurting for money?

- By Liam Denning

Tesla Inc. says it doesn’t need to raise more money. But a new report from a usually supportive quarter suggests it not only should, but really, really should.

Adam Jonas, a Morgan Stanley analyst who typically rates Tesla stock with gusto, just slashed his target price 23% to $291 — curiously, within a buck of where it closed the night before. The stock duly dropped about 3% on Tuesday but rose $2.30, or 0.8%, to $286.48 on Wednesday.

There are a clutch of interestin­g things to note about Jonas’ report. For example, despite the hammered target price and the earnings estimate for 2019 going “poof ” from a positive $1.31 a share to a negative $4.69 — before counting stock-based compensati­on — Jonas’ Tesla rating is still effectivel­y a “hold.”

There is also the useful fact that about a third of that new $291 price target relates to Tesla Mobility, a robo-taxi business that doesn’t yet — how to put this? — exist.

(Meanwhile, criticism of Tesla’s board mounted as proxy advisor Glass Lewis & Co. sided with investors who oppose the reelection of three directors and want Tesla to appoint an independen­t chairman to replace Elon Musk in that role. He is also chief executive. Tesla’s board has urged votes against the independen­t chairman proposal.)

But about that new fundraisin­g.

Jonas now expects Tesla to tap investors for $3 billion in the third quarter, up from an earlier estimate of $2.5 billion. The kicker, though, is that $3 billion doesn’t really do much for Tesla’s strained balance sheet these days.

Using the estimates in

Jonas’ report, Tesla would actually score worse on a range of metrics that measure its liquidity — assets that can be most readily converted to cash — at the end of 2018 than it did at the end of 2017, even with that $3-billion infusion:

Current ratio: 0.856 (2017), 0.751 (2018)

Quick ratio: 0.506 (2017), 0.318 (2018)

Cash ratio: 0.439 (2017), 0.201 (2018)

The only metric that improves is common equity versus total assets — but then, selling $3 billion of new common equity will tend to do that. And two other liquidity metrics — cash from operations versus total liabilitie­s and cash from operations versus average current liabilitie­s — have minus signs in front of them, reflecting actual and expected negative cash from operations.

This shouldn’t be surprising. Recall that Tesla’s working capital is deeply negative — to the tune of $2.27 billion at the end of March — and its leverage, both on and off the balance sheet, has continued to climb. Any new equity raise would have to be substantia­l to offset those obligation­s and get Tesla’s ratios looking healthier.

But Tesla bulls probably wouldn’t look at it that way. Rather, they would see the next $3 billion as a shortterm bridge to a place where Tesla has fixed its Model 3 problems, and cash from operations starts doing the heavy lifting.

This is the crux of the bull thesis: Sustained profitabil­ity, however deferred to date, remains just around the corner, and Tesla’s giant $48.6billion market cap provides the reserve tank (battery?) to get there.

You can see evidence of this in Tesla’s Altman ZScore, a weighted average of five ratios in which a score of less than 1.8 can indicate a high risk of bankruptcy. Tesla scored 1.3 at the end of 2017 and, using Morgan Stanley’s numbers, would theoretica­lly end 2018 at 1.27 to 1.35, depending on how one treats the equity sale’s effect on the market cap.

Again, the $3-billion infusion doesn’t really move that needle. More important, though, in the absence of positive profits and with working capital so negative, virtually all of Tesla’s Zscore is a function of that market cap.

And the thing is, a big market cap is powerful; Tesla is living proof. But to simply focus on that while ignoring the slow drip of faltering liquidity ratios is to run a colossal risk and put a lot of trust in your fellow shareholde­rs keeping their nerve.

All of which makes Morgan Stanley’s target-price cut unhelpful, especially as the bank has led previous capital rounds and analysts have turned a bit more skeptical in general. A year ago, Wall Street’s “buys” outnumbere­d “sell” ratings almost 2 to 1, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Today, the stock is slightly lower, and buys and sells are almost neck-and-neck.

Until there is hard evidence of sustained progress on fixing the Model 3’s problems, Tesla relies on sheer belief. And as these latest estimates from a long-standing bull suggest, shoring up its balance sheet may require a bigger slug of belief than even the believers expect.

 ?? David Butow For The Times ?? AN ANALYST expects Tesla to raise $3 billion in the third quarter. Above, Tesla’s Fremont, Calif., factory.
David Butow For The Times AN ANALYST expects Tesla to raise $3 billion in the third quarter. Above, Tesla’s Fremont, Calif., factory.
 ?? David Butow For The Times ?? TESLA BULLS probably would see a $3-billion infusion as a short-term bridge to a place where Tesla has fixed its Model 3 problems.
David Butow For The Times TESLA BULLS probably would see a $3-billion infusion as a short-term bridge to a place where Tesla has fixed its Model 3 problems.

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