There's an age-old strategy on Wall Street: Buy the rumor, sell the news. We see this play out repeatedly in the hype cycle. Expectations about a major event, a major product release or a new announcement boil over into exuberance. Investors egg each other on, saying things like "The world will never be the same after this date!" And almost without fail, reality falls short of the impossibly high expectations. Battery Day was a dud. The much-hyped Tesla (Nasdaq: TSLA) event had mobs of investors drooling. It was rumored that CEO Elon Musk was going to unveil a mind-blowing piece of "million mile" technology. But instead of a Willy Wonka-like show, what they got was a multiyear plan that eventually sees the electric vehicle maker producing batteries in-house (instead of sourcing them from Panasonic) and some gradual technical and supply chain improvements to reduce costs. Yawn. Shares of Tesla tumbled from $430 all the way down to $372 in the days following the Battery Day disappointment. But that's okay. Musk is trying to move mountains. And that takes time. Shares have since rebounded. And they're still up more than 400% in 2020! But if you've missed out on the Tesla boat, there's still a way investors can put themselves in the perfect position to profit on what the company laid out in its plans. In fact, it's already sent shares of one unknown company soaring more than 600% in the last month! Supply Chain SqueezeFor as long as I can remember, the global EV boom has been haunted by the supply of raw materials needed. Here at Profit Trends, we've covered these obstacles in the form of copper and nickel. Tesla wants to have enough battery capacity to produce 30 million EVs by 2030. That's a massive ramp-up from the 500,000 the carmaker will roll off the line this year. And that's only one EV maker's goal! But here's the thing... There's one element standing in the way of Musk and his plans for automotive domination. Lithium. Total global production of lithium is around 400,000 tons per year. That's enough to power 2 million to 3 million EVs. And that's if all of that lithium went to battery production, which it doesn't. Right now, only a third of the lithium mined is dedicated to EVs. |
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