This isn't a very technical analysis, but I don't see how TSLA can be worth this much - they'll never be able to produce enough to substantiate this value in the near term.
Fizban said:
The thing with Tesla is that it isn't structured as a traditional automaker.
Tesla has the world's largest charging network, built out at immense cost and while not currently profitable certainly an asset of considerable value.
Tesla owns its own stores/service centers (most auto manufacturers leave all of that to independently owned dealer/service networks)
Owns its own software (no need for Apple or Android)
Tesla solar business
Tesla energy storage business
Self driving car effort
Battery R&D and production efforts
bmks270 said:Fizban said:
The thing with Tesla is that it isn't structured as a traditional automaker.
Tesla has the world's largest charging network, built out at immense cost and while not currently profitable certainly an asset of considerable value.
Tesla owns its own stores/service centers (most auto manufacturers leave all of that to independently owned dealer/service networks)
Owns its own software (no need for Apple or Android)
Tesla solar business
Tesla energy storage business
Self driving car effort
Battery R&D and production efforts
Lol, the adoption of standard CSS chargers has forced Tesla to make it standard on the model 3 in Europe. Tesla isn't the largest charging network, there are more CSS charge locations (because it is standardized and offered by multiple companies) than Tesla locations.
Deputy Travis Junior said:
Yea but still, in q3, they generated 6B in revenue. GM generated 36B in revenue. I get that Tesla has some other potential revenue streams, but it's generating 1/6 of the revenue and has twice the valuation.
Its current valuation is completely detached from reality. Good for Elon and I hope they continue to do well, but let's be honest: their current stock price is total bull****
Deputy Travis Junior said:
Yea but still, in q3, they generated 6B in revenue. GM generated 36B in revenue. I get that Tesla has some other potential revenue streams, but it's generating 1/6 of the revenue and has twice the valuation.
Its current valuation is completely detached from reality. Good for Elon and I hope they continue to do well, but let's be honest: their current stock price is total bull****
And this is the problem with Tesla, they've always pushed the boundaries of innovation but they are constantly weaseling their way out of regulations/obligations. They sell the sizzle not the steak more than any brand in the country.ABATTBQ11 said:Deputy Travis Junior said:
Yea but still, in q3, they generated 6B in revenue. GM generated 36B in revenue. I get that Tesla has some other potential revenue streams, but it's generating 1/6 of the revenue and has twice the valuation.
Its current valuation is completely detached from reality. Good for Elon and I hope they continue to do well, but let's be honest: their current stock price is total bull****
I will admit that I'm impressed with what they're managed to do. Several months ago I was still on the fence, but I didn't think they were going bankrupt either.
I think the stock is inflated at this point. It's priced like a tech stock, not an auto manufacturer stock. Kind of makes sense with the possible alternate revenue streams, but some of those have yet to be realized. They still have a lot of debt and not a lot of sustained profits.
I'm also curious as to how battery gate will affect them. For those who don't know, Tesla reduced the range and charge rates for thousands of Model S's through an OTA update, possibly to avoid a battery fire issue that should have resulted in a recall instead. People noticed, and the NHTSA is investigating them. They're also being sued.
They're also being looked at for calling warranty claims "goodwill" work to avoid lemon laws. Seems like fraud.
LCE said:
I really hope people don't take stock advice off this thread. From the beginning it's been a clown show.
one MEEN Ag said:LCE said:
I really hope people don't take stock advice off this thread. From the beginning it's been a clown show.
The sentiments on this thread match any conversation about Tesla's stock. There is one camp that think Tesla's gonna take over the world with infinite, fully self driving cars any day now. And another group that looks at their debt and valuation and think the stock price is insane.
Fizban said:one MEEN Ag said:LCE said:
I really hope people don't take stock advice off this thread. From the beginning it's been a clown show.
The sentiments on this thread match any conversation about Tesla's stock. There is one camp that think Tesla's gonna take over the world with infinite, fully self driving cars any day now. And another group that looks at their debt and valuation and think the stock price is insane.
If you assume Tesla is just an extremely fast growing automaker then their valuation is too high.
The issue is that Tesla is very much a tech company that is playing in several different significant areas.
Shoot look at just the valuation of things like self driving car technology efforts:
Alphabet's Waymo valuation cut 40% by Morgan Stanley to $105 billion amid challenges in self-driving car market
https://www.cnbc.com/2019/09/27/waymo-valuation-cut-40percent-by-morgan-stanley-to-105-billion.html
Or battery companies:
CATL, market cap $37 billion https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/300750.SZ/
so forth...
bmks270 said:Fizban said:one MEEN Ag said:LCE said:
I really hope people don't take stock advice off this thread. From the beginning it's been a clown show.
The sentiments on this thread match any conversation about Tesla's stock. There is one camp that think Tesla's gonna take over the world with infinite, fully self driving cars any day now. And another group that looks at their debt and valuation and think the stock price is insane.
If you assume Tesla is just an extremely fast growing automaker then their valuation is too high.
The issue is that Tesla is very much a tech company that is playing in several different significant areas.
Shoot look at just the valuation of things like self driving car technology efforts:
Alphabet's Waymo valuation cut 40% by Morgan Stanley to $105 billion amid challenges in self-driving car market
https://www.cnbc.com/2019/09/27/waymo-valuation-cut-40percent-by-morgan-stanley-to-105-billion.html
Or battery companies:
CATL, market cap $37 billion https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/300750.SZ/
so forth...
Until Tesla monetizes and turns a profit on any product they should be valued as a growing loss producing automaker.
Acquiring a failed solar energy company doesn't inspire confidence.
Can I go with Tesla will be the most important company of the next 20 years, AND the stock price is overvalued? It'll come down some before it goes back up.one MEEN Ag said:LCE said:
II really hope people don't take stock advice off this thread. From the beginning it's been a clown show.
The sentiments on this thread match any conversation about Tesla's stock. There is one camp that think Tesla's gonna take over the world with infinite, fully self driving cars any day now. And another group that looks at their debt and valuation and think the stock price is insane.
Annual reports are audited.All A&M said:
'I think Musk is all about smoke and mirrors (his financial reporting is misleading at best), but I have to admit if I were buying an electric car with 200+ mile range for under $50K, I would buy the Tesla Model 3. The only other option is the Chevrolet Bolt which is smaller and uglier than the Model 3.
The problem for Tesla is VW, Audi, BMW, Ford, Chevrolet, Nissan, Lexus, Honda, Toyota, and others will enter new models in this space (200+ miles < $50K) in the next 6-18 months. Looking at pricing, specs, and body styles of those other cars.... I see several that I would rather have than the Tesla.
Endo Ag said:Annual reports are audited.All A&M said:
'I think Musk is all about smoke and mirrors (his financial reporting is misleading at best), but I have to admit if I were buying an electric car with 200+ mile range for under $50K, I would buy the Tesla Model 3. The only other option is the Chevrolet Bolt which is smaller and uglier than the Model 3.
The problem for Tesla is VW, Audi, BMW, Ford, Chevrolet, Nissan, Lexus, Honda, Toyota, and others will enter new models in this space (200+ miles < $50K) in the next 6-18 months. Looking at pricing, specs, and body styles of those other cars.... I see several that I would rather have than the Tesla.
Tesla killers are around the corner, just like they've been for 7 years.
Future electric vehicles from all manufacturers look great. Their marketing department has a bad habit of not asking the engineering department about those numbers.
jamaggie06 said:
I didnt realize that everyone drives the same car today; the one with the "best" specs...
Just bc Tesla has the specs and brand you want or prefer, doesnt mean the billions of other drivers out there feel the same.
Tesla stock is priced like they will literally become the sole auto manufacturer. It's ridiculous, regardless of how good the product is, or how much you and other owners love it.
Quote:
The reason TSLA is priced the way it is is because it is disrupting one of the biggest industries on earth, and is a significant participant in several emerging fields with potential.
I think the point that the "Tesla killer" is basically a boogeyman is well taken. Tesla is finally finding its footing and moving past the "chippy startup" phase, and the brand has a lot of panache, so I don't think anybody is going to swoop in and kill it. But let's look forward:Fizban said:
The point is that for years people have been saying that once a "real" automaker decides to make an electric car Tesla will be doomed. When these new electric cars have arrived they haven't been remotely competitive. As it turns out building a good electric car is a very hard engineering problem and requires a lot of tech that is new to the older manufacturers.
So far the next wave of challengers don't appear to be on track to do much better.
The reason TSLA is priced the way it is is because it is disrupting one of the biggest industries on earth, and is a significant participant in several emerging fields with potential.