One of the largest German banks,
Nord/LB initiated coverage of Tesla not only with a sell rating, but with jabs
at CEO Elon Musk.
"You have to ask yourself what
will happen first: that Elon Musk will fly to Mars with SpaceX, or that he will
finally operate Tesla in the black," joked analyst Frank Schwope on
Tuesday.
Schwope set a $270 price target,
implying 15 percent downside over the next 12 months.
Elon
Musk, CEO of Tesla.
It appears even
international analysts are poking fun at Tesla's Elon Musk.
German bank Nord/LB
initiated coverage on car-maker not only with a sell rating, but with quips
making fun of the company's top executive.
"You have to ask
yourself what will happen first: that Elon Musk will fly to Mars with SpaceX,
or that he will finally operate Tesla in the black," joked analyst Frank
Schwope on Tuesday, according to a translation of the note, which was written
in German. "We consider it a big mistake that Tesla and Elon Musk do not
concentrate on a few important things, but instead appear to do everything a
little bit, but nothing all the way through."
SpaceX — a private
aerospace and space transport company — is also headed by Musk. That company has also been making
headlines for its independent ventures into space as well as goals to colonize
Mars.
But in the public
sphere, one of the problems with Tesla may not be in its innovative character,
but rather in its apparent inability to "drill down" on production,
according to the analyst. Schwope set a $270 price target, implying 15 percent
downside over the next 12 months.
Shares of Tesla traded
around flatline Tuesday.
Tesla has struggled to
convince Wall Street the car company's finances our sound while production
bottlenecks and persistent deficits beleaguer Musk's innovative goals. Echoing
doubts of other Street analysts, Schwope argued that Tesla isn't in a position
to sell 500,000 cars in 2018 and is unlikely to operate profitably before 2020.
The company remains a
popular target of short sellers, who bet that Tesla shares are destined to fall
over the next few months. Though Tesla stock remains up nearly 50 percent year
to date, shares have slipped more than 8 percent in the last three months. The
company recently unveiled a semi truck as well as a sporty new roadster.
"Tesla stock is an
extreme bet on the future," continued Schwope. "The share development
depends on the transformation of the company from a small premium manufacturer
with five-digit sales figures to a mass manufacturer with figures in the
six-digit or millions range. "
"We don't see
Tesla as a tough competitor of the established automakers, but rather as a
trailblazer that will push long-established companies to boost their
performance."
The analyst noted that
he views Tesla's $50 billion market cap is overvalued. -- With reporting by Spencer Kimball
https://www.cnbc.com/2017/11/28/analyst-jokes-musk-will-make-it-to-mars-before-tesla-is-profitable.html
https://www.cnbc.com/2017/11/28/analyst-jokes-musk-will-make-it-to-mars-before-tesla-is-profitable.html
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