Tesla needs to deliver blowout quarter to reclaim trillion-dollar market value

tesla-needs-to-deliver-blowout-quarter-to-reclaim-trillion-dollar-market-value

Even strong fourth-quarter numbers could go only so far in soothing investors’ nervousness about the stock

Author of the article:

Bloomberg News

Esha Dey and Thyagaraju Adinarayan

A Tesla dealership in Walnut Creek, California, U.S. Photo by David Paul Morris/Bloomberg files Pole position in the electric-vehicle business and a high valuation means Tesla Inc. needs to deliver a blowout quarter to reclaim its trillion-dollar market value.

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Tesla’s estimate-beating production and delivery stats have helped boost its projected revenue growth to 46 per cent in 2022, a far cry compared to 20 per cent for General Motors Co. and 15 per cent for Ford Motor Co. The problem is, even after the stock slumped 25 per cent from its November record, Tesla’s dizzying market capitalization of US$922 billion is more than 10 times the size of those 100-plus year old Detroit giants.

For Lindsey Bell, chief markets & money strategist at Ally Invest Securities, Tesla’s size only makes it more susceptible to violent market gyrations amid an environment of rising interest rates.

The broader meltdown in high-growth stocks, spurred by the Federal Reserve’s hawkish stance on monetary policy, adds to the headache for Tesla, which trades at 94 times forward earnings — among the 10 most expensive members of the S&P 500 Index. What’s more, the spectre of aggressive competition could hurt its pricing power as GM, Ford and new entrants such as Rivian Automotive Inc. roll out more electric vehicles.

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More On This Topic Tesla’s Elon Musk stakes claim to be most genuinely innovative entrepreneur of his generation Tesla on track to enter bear market following report of SEC probe Tesla rival Rivian surges on debut as investors pile into eco-friendly stock “If 2022 ends up being a year of more cautiousness toward some of the historical star performers, it is difficult to see why Tesla won’t get caught up in that,” David Jones, chief market strategist at Capital.com, said in an interview.

Even strong fourth-quarter numbers could go only so far in soothing investors’ nervousness about the stock, given its whopping 27,000 per cent run since Tesla went public in 2010.

Wall Street analysts, in aggregate, see the stock going nowhere over the next year: The average price target tracked by Bloomberg is US$953, an increase of four per cent from Tuesday’s close.

For Wedbush’s Daniel Ives, who has a US$1,400 target, the focus on Wednesday’s earnings will be around commentary on deliveries in 2022, the shortage of semiconductors, when production will begin at new factories in Austin, Texas, and Berlin, and the company’s growth and profitability outlook for this year and beyond.

“We believe the emerging fundamental story at Tesla will be back in focus of the Street with currently demand outstripping supply for Musk & Co. by roughly 30 per cent globally based on our estimates,” he wrote in a note.

Bloomberg.com

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