I would still love to hear, you rational for setting at $200, was it simply because it traded at that last year?
The one thing I hate is how every company is apparently a 'technology' company. I have worked for two US financial institutions. In both places, I heard the same line. 'We are technology companies with a banking licence'. No you are not so stop trying to compare yourself to google and Fintech companies just because you have a large technology budget.
Let's be absolutely clear. I think he is a very talented guy and has built a great car and I wish him well.
But that does not make his company worth €86 billion.
Likewise I love using Uber and I wish we had it in Dublin, but it's hard to see how it can make any profit, much less a profit to justify its current valuation.
I hate tobacco companies, but they are very profitable.
Brendan
Hi Brendan,
They have a product that you and I love, a gargantuan amount of users, and access to what is one of the most important resources of the 21st Century, data.
I believe that it is unwise to dismiss that.
It is not analagous to you and I opening, say, a shop where profitability is the key indicator. How many of the tech giants looked like basket-cases financially?
OK, so I have shorted Tesla at $536.
I have set myself a stop at $1000. In other words, if it doubles in price, I will close my position at a loss. My exposure is in the order of 1% of my portfolio.
I have set myself a limit of $200. In other words, I will close my position if it falls to $200.
Hi Andrew
Sorry, I had meant to address this very good question.
There is no particular rationale for closing out of Tesla at $200. I thought it important to set a price though when buying in.
Maybe $200 is the "right" price for the stock, in which case I should close out long before e.g. $300.
It's very difficult to price a stock which is not making profits and shows no sign of making sustainable profits any time in the near future. It's easy to say it's not worth $86 billion. It's much more difficult to say that it is worth $20 billion.
I will review it if it falls towards $300.
The last time I shorted it , I hadn't got an exit plan and would have made a much higher profit had I exited earlier.
The only comparison I have is Bitcoin. It's worth zero, but I will close out at $3000. The rationale there is that I will have made a good profit and there is every chance that it might rise again and I would short it again when it rises again.
Brendan
Is there more than a 50/50 chance of success here?
The problem is the timing. I would be fairly confident that Tesla will fall to about $100.
Brendan
Tesla is producing a quality product that is in very high demand , I can only see demand increasing .
If the price today were $5,000 you would be very surprised at my forecast of $1,000.
The price has to be related in some way to future profitability.
Brendan,
You may be right that Tesla is overpriced. However, I'd really appreciate it if you would answer a few specific questions please?
1. Do you accept that Tesla made a profit in its last reported quarter - Q3 2019?
2. Do you accept that it is likely to report a profit in Q4 2019 - results to be published later this month?
3. Do you accept that it is likely to report a profit for the full year 2020?
Not really sure what they are going to answer but my view:
1. Yes. Of about $150m. Telsa have announced profitable quarters before. The last two quarters of 2018 were profitable before they then announced a $700m loss in Q1 of 2019.
2. Probably but see above
3. I don't see it to be honest but it could. Lets see what Q1 results are like.
Although i have been checking into Askaboutmoney from it's birth I have never posted a comment before but this thread has been most interesting and engaging. Before I go any further just to say I am a long time Tesla share holder and will continue to be for years to come.
From the begining of tesla there has been a narrative sold by vested interests that at every turn created fear, uncertainty,and doubt (FUD) about Tesla and Musk. That's to be expected because Musk and Tesla are massive disrupters to two big industries, energy(oil) and auto's. That narrative has been a huge headwind for Tesla but because of the strength of Musk and the absolute determination of his employees they have beaten the odds and are now one of fastest growing auto company in the US and possible the world. Unfortunately there are many that have swallowed the fud and shorted the company with the absolute conviction that they will go bankrupt at any minute. They have last billions between then.
So i was very surprised to see Brendan Burgess, someone I would see as very sensible join the band wagon. This is the line that has me here.
Brendan, you said
"It's very difficult to price a stock which is not making profits and shows no sign of making sustainable profits any time in the near future"
I assume you have read the Tesla accounts and have researched where sales and revenue are going in the future? Have you? Or have you read the figures on Seeking Alpha or such? Tesla WILL be profitable in 2020.
When I read the posts here there is a lack of any hard figures. That is made all the more clear by the short bet you have made. You have left a scope from $100 to $1000 of a share price??? Would the sensible side of you not look at that huge difference and think it's telling you something? What it says to me is "I haven't a clue whats going to happen but it's going to $100 for sure" That's not investing, that just gambling.
I am posting because I am interested in knowing why someone that is not really into shorting and knows there way around money came to this decision on Tesla.
Tesla is a news driven momentum stock. It also has a lot of investors that want to believe in the company and that makes it difficult for people who are bearish. The shares have risen over 100% in three months which is a multiple of what analysts were expecting.
I find it fascinating that you can be fairly confident on this and the same with Bitcoin going to zero its bordering on arrogance dismissing the market as a whole and the intellects on both side of the buy sell line that ultimately have set the line as it is now.
1. Do you accept that Tesla made a profit in its last reported quarter - Q3 2019?
2. Do you accept that it is likely to report a profit in Q4 2019 - results to be published later this month?
3. Do you accept that it is likely to report a profit for the full year 2020
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