Brendan Burgess
Founder
- Messages
- 53,770
I feel for those like Brendan and Colm who have lost money
I am very concerned about climate change and urban air pollution and think that EVs can help in this area. I like to see companies in this field grow and prosper. I think that when you short a company, there is a part of you which doesn't fully wish for the company to truly prosper. For example, imagine if the very respected leader of the Free World had some form of Damascene conversion and tweeted that our oil guzzling ways need to dramatically reduce asap. This would be a good thing for humanity, right? Presumably, however, this would just cause an extension to the nightmare for those who short Tesla. Is this reasonable?
The idea that it's a bit of a stretch that some people would seek to have their investments aligned (within reason) to their values now also presents. This is news to me and presumably also to the many companies that market socially responsible investments.
So the CEO is saying that retail investors have a better understanding of his company than professional institutional investors..
There are going to be people very burnt on this stock.....
In general, institutional investors are pretty useless at identifying overpriced or underpriced shares. So I don't think that they have either a better or worse understanding.
However, when a share is subject to mania, do the institutional investors evaluate it better? Maybe they do. I don't know.
Brendan
Just a little troll from MuskCam across this quote from Musk from the earnings last week when asked about the negativity of analysts...
"I do think that a lot of retail investors actually have a deeper and more accurate insights than many of the big institutional investors and certainly a better insight than many of the analysts,” he said. “It seems like if people really looked at...what some of the smart — smaller retail investors predicted about the future of Tesla...you’d probably get the highest accuracy and remarkable insight from some of those predictions.”
So the CEO is saying that retail investors have a better understanding of his company than professional institutional investors......There are going to be people very burnt on this stock.....
In general, institutional investors are pretty useless at identifying overpriced or underpriced shares. So I don't think that they have either a better or worse understanding.
However, when a share is subject to mania, do the institutional investors evaluate it better? Maybe they do. I don't know.
Brendan
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