Times Colonist

Tesla’s outlook brightens, doubts linger

- TOM KRISHER and MICHAEL LIEDTKE

DETROIT — Tesla’s losses were mounting last summer, massive debt payments were looming and both Wall Street and U.S. regulators had run out of patience with the erratic behaviour of CEO Elon Musk.

One year ago this week, shares plunged 14 per cent after Tesla posted another quarterly loss, this one for $408 million, wiping out about $6 billion of the company’s worth.

Since then the stock has blasted off like a rocket at SpaceX, another Musk-led company. The electric car and solar panel maker successful­ly opened a factory in China, introduced the Model Y electric SUV, made debt payments and posted profits for three straight quarters. Musk also toned down his inflammato­ry posts on Twitter that had cost him and the company $40 million US in penalties from U.S. securities regulators.

Tesla’s market value today is three times that of Ford, General Motors and Fiat Chrysler, combined. A single share of Tesla now goes for nearly $1,600 — a sevenfold increase from a year ago — making it one of the most expensive publicly traded shares in the world.

“Things just turned on a dime,” said Garrett Nelson, an analyst at CFRA who specialize­s in the automotive industry. “It’s just been one positive announceme­nt after another.”

The dizzying performanc­e on Tuesday qualified Musk for his second huge payday in less than three months, this one worth more than $2 billion.

His net worth has soared to an estimated $72 billion US, just behind Warren Buffett on the Forbes Billionair­es list after passing the famed investor this month.

In total, Musk and other Tesla shareholde­rs have made about $240 billion since March 18 when the stock stood at $361 — its low point for this year.

With second-quarter sales of Tesla vehicles outpacing the first despite a global pandemic, shares could jump again if Tesla surprises on Wednesday with a fourth consecutiv­e profitable quarter. That could lead to Tesla’s admission into the club of corporate giants: the S&P 500 stock index.

But analysts have begun to question if the shares are running too hot.

Analysts polled by FactSet expect a $228 million net loss from April through June. Only one analyst has a 12-month stock price target above the current value. A message was left Tuesday seeking comment from Tesla.

Nelson says shares have outpaced Tesla’s fundamenta­l performanc­e, and he’s telling clients to sell. He placed a price target at about two-thirds the current value of shares.

In an interview, Nelson said April-to-June registrati­ons of Tesla vehicles fell by nearly half in California, the company’s biggest U.S. market.

That’s an indication of waning demand for its vehicles, which start at $37,990 US for a base Model 3 but the car can easily hit $60,000 with options.

Tesla also cut the price of its long-range Model Y by $3,000, which Nelson sees as a red flag. And the company is about to engage in a bout of heavy spending with new factories going up in Germany and the U.S.

There are also market factors that have flung share prices far higher, Nelson said.

Short sellers who perceived flaws at Tesla have since been buying shares to cover massive losses as the stock price leaped, Nelson said. Short-sellers now account for only 7.5 per cent of Tesla’s outstandin­g stock, down from over 23 per cent a year ago, he said.

Morgan Stanley analyst Adam Jonas has a $740 price target on Tesla, arguing that the market overestima­tes the company’s share of future electric vehicle and connected car revenue.

Investors are treating Tesla like tech stocks Apple and Amazon, which took off years ago after hitting $300 billion in market value, Jonas wrote in an investor note. Tesla hit that mark last week, but its revenue and pretax earnings are far smaller than either tech company when they reached the $300 billion valuation, he wrote.

Those who buy Tesla at around $1,500 US per share have to believe that long-term U.S.-China trade relations will remain stable, older automakers will fail to make competitiv­e electric vehicles, and big tech companies such as Google, Amazon and Apple won’t be successful in developing electric vehicle systems, he wrote.

Jonas, who is uneasy about deteriorat­ing relations between the world’s two biggest economies, says traditiona­l automakers are ready to spend over $400 billion on electric vehicles in the next five years, and he expects tech companies to enter the transporta­tion business.

The run-up in Tesla’s stock positioned Musk for another big payday after the Palo Alto, California, company awarded him a stock package worth more than $700 million in May.

That compensati­on is part of an incentive-laden deal that Tesla’s board worked out two years ago to inspire Musk to build a company that eventually generates $175 billion in revenue, and is valued at $650 billion.

Musk cleared another hurdle Tuesday when Tesla’s market value averaged $150 billion for a six-month stretch, according to data compiled by FactSet Research. Hitting that threshold means Musk is in line to receive 1.69 million stock options valued at $350.02, or nearly 80 per cent below Tuesday’s closing price of $1,568.36.

The huge gap would make those stock options worth $2.06 billion on paper, although Musk can’t sell the shares for at least five years.

 ??  ?? A truck loaded with Tesla cars departs the company’s plant in Fremont, California. Tesla has posted three straight profitable quarters, opened a factory in China and rolled out the Model Y small SUV. Some analysts are beginning to question whether the run will last, however.
A truck loaded with Tesla cars departs the company’s plant in Fremont, California. Tesla has posted three straight profitable quarters, opened a factory in China and rolled out the Model Y small SUV. Some analysts are beginning to question whether the run will last, however.

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