There's no question about it... The oncoming transition to electric vehicles (EVs) is a massive investment opportunity - a "megatrend," if you will. Governments across the planet have announced plans to rapidly phase out the internal combustion engine. In the meantime, there are currently more than 1 billion automobiles on the road worldwide - and the International Energy Agency estimates that at this point, fewer than 10 million of them are electric. EVs, which will eventually dominate this market, currently have a rounding error of a market share. The EV market share is on the cusp of explosive growth. Hundreds of millions of electric cars are going to hit the road in the coming years. I've been telling you for months that Tesla (Nasdaq: TSLA) is not the way to profit from this transition. That's because Tesla's $550 billion stock market valuation is absurdly high for a company that still hasn't turned a profit manufacturing its electric cars. Tesla's earnings are all smoke and mirrors. The only reason that Tesla has been able to post any profit to date is it has been selling regulatory emissions credits to other automakers. Despite Tesla's lack of profits, in December, its stock market valuation exceeded the combined market value of the next nine largest (and very profitable) car companies in the world. That includes automakers like Ford Motor Company (NYSE: F), General Motors (NYSE: GM), Honda Motor Company (NYSE: HMC) and Toyota Motor Corp. (NYSE: TM) - all companies that are also rolling out dozens of EV models that will compete aggressively for market share in the years ahead. With a $550 billion valuation, Tesla is priced as though it will be exponentially more profitable than any automaker in history. I'd even say that Tesla is valued as though it is already as profitable as the entire current auto industry. That is wild considering at this point we don't even know that Tesla is ever going to make any money. I'm far from the only person who thinks Tesla's valuation is crazy... In fact, Dr. Michael Burry, who was portrayed by Academy Award winner Christian Bale in the movie The Big Short, just revealed that he has made a massive bet that Tesla's share price will plummet. The Big Short portrayed how Burry scored windfall profits by making a prescient bet on the U.S. housing bust in 2007 and 2008. Burry's most recent quarterly filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission shows that he owns put options on 800,100 Tesla shares. That means if Tesla's share price collapses, Burry is positioned again for windfall gains. With Tesla's insane valuation, I think he might be onto something again... |
No comments:
Post a Comment