05-01-2021, 07:06 PM | #551 |
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so they sold regulatory credits and bitcoin while other automakers made their profits from selling cars I'll post this again.
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05-01-2021, 07:14 PM | #552 |
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Unfortunately the guy moved to my state. Hopefully competition the next couple of years will put him where he needs to be. Looking at the PE it is pretty obvious the company valuation is still driven by emotional people who may be surprised in the not to distant future and not in a good way.
As the rest of the industry gets established in the EV world will it not be pretty for the tick symbol T. Only time will tell.
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05-01-2021, 08:22 PM | #553 | ||
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This is your key sign that not only is the rest of the industry NOT getting established, they're going backwards, thus they have to pay Tesla for regulatory credits because their BEVs aren't selling (or don't exist). (e.g., Tesla sells every BEV it can make; VW sells 1.5 production days/month of BEVs) (2.) Tesla doesn't just sell cars But, for now, let's ignore the $1.4B in non-auto revenue and think about just automotive revenue for a sec: • Ford, as an example, earns revenue primarily from sales to dealerships. • Tesla is the automaker, the dealership, the service center, the gas station, the parts suppliers, the software vendor, and the insurance company. This means Tesla is truly vertical: they own the customer relationship and they control all their manufacturing, and especially important, they make their own batteries with their own patented tech. Tesla is one of the few companies on the planet set up to be a trillion $ company. But, if China crushes them, they won't be. Anyway, I'll post this again with some revenue highlights for scale: |
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05-02-2021, 06:00 AM | #554 |
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interesting...automotive revenues 8.5 bn and cost of revenue 8.2 billion so is there any profit in the automating sector despite all the vertical integration etc.
On the other hand I read this https://finance.yahoo.com/news/amazo...201758948.html That's what real profit sounds like a few tesla millions sounds like loose change no? |
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05-02-2021, 07:33 PM | #555 | |
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Any reasonable investor (and I think it's reasonable to be in TSLA with a non-negligible % of your portfolio) should be re-thinking the thesis and taking some profits to rebalance - this just wasn't the quarter TSLA should've had, despite being perfectly fine for a normal company. It brings into the question management and if they're truly managing revenue, manufacturing, and operations ... because this looks like a phone-it-in quarter and that's not cool for a hyper-growth company. If I owned TSLA directly, I'd be taking down exposure. |
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05-02-2021, 08:49 PM | #556 | |
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05-02-2021, 09:45 PM | #557 | |
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The "buh buh buh the P:E" talking point for a growth company is ridiculous - it's the reverse of expecting GM to have the market growth of TSLA - i.e., "cats sleep w dogs right?" As an example, here's a comparo of Amazon & TSLA's CAGR - spoiler alert: Tesla is growing faster than Amazon, 73% CAGR vs Amazon's 53%. *though I believe TSLA's growth comes with much more risk as it's global consumers vs US consumers ... though that also means more upside if they make it through the chinese gauntlet.
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05-02-2021, 10:33 PM | #558 |
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With this mega ongoing thread about Musk and Tesla, I'm surprised none of you have started a new thread for SpaceX. That is an incredible story and I find it interesting that Elon Musk "competes" with Amazon's Bezos and his company Blue Origin, though I don't see any competition per se. I suppose that enterprise will be more focused on consumers flying to space compared to Musk's infatuation with traveling to Mars? GrussGott's last entry about TSLA and AMZN reminded me of this subject.
Anyway, carry on. Lol. |
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05-02-2021, 10:40 PM | #559 | |
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One doesn't have to like Musk, Teslas, TSLA, or SpaceX to be impressed by what Musk has accomplished ... if you're principled.
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05-02-2021, 10:49 PM | #560 | |
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I can't think of anyone that matches up with Elon Musk in terms of the vast range of accomplishments he has demonstrated with such different business entities. Can't even imagine what the future will look like with that other crazy stuff he's developing with AI and Neuralink. Dude is a genius, period. |
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05-02-2021, 11:24 PM | #561 |
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Maybe he's a genius, though my read on him having talked to people who've worked with him is, he's into 1st principles and the details of engineering problems ... combine that with a willingness to take extreme risk and you get to his accomplishments. Many forget he literally put every dollar he had into Tesla and got very close to broke - few are willing to absorb that level of personal financial risk.
Said differently, none of Musk's accomplishments are unbelievable engineering accomplishments, they're just really hard problems solved by someone with the grit, tenacity, and risk tolerance to do it ... and few have that. End of the day, all great business strategy can be summed up in 4 words: do something very hard. Which makes Musk the ultimate business strategist.
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05-05-2021, 04:30 PM | #562 | |||
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05-05-2021, 07:33 PM | #563 | |
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(a.) Insignificant # (b.) Balance sheet game Said differently, the CFO could tweak any of 50 things and replace that line item while changing nothing else ... it's the media's favorite go-to Tesla story ... wait, no that's wrong. The media's favorite Tesla story is: |
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05-08-2021, 06:42 PM | #565 | |
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But, yeah, those X5 45e (and other hybrids) are selling like hotcakes and BMW is an SUV company now ... I'd love to see the model breakdown (such as it is) if it's out there ... |
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05-08-2021, 07:08 PM | #566 | ||
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2,3,5,7,x1,x2,x3,x5 all have hybrid options. Ix3 available I3 and I8 available but soon not to be. ix i4 ix1 etc in the horizon. Nomenclature is confusing. i= petrol in bmw 530e = hybrid but i4 =electric only real grumble. |
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05-08-2021, 10:21 PM | #567 | |
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The Bolt and ID.4 are frankestein cars pulled together from the part bin & political infighting - company killers. in any event, the Mach-e seems to be a really good car and the next iteration might even be a great car ... if they can get the charger network pinned down, they'll be real competition for Tesla! |
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05-08-2021, 10:36 PM | #568 |
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05-08-2021, 11:20 PM | #569 |
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Somewhere inside BMW's Silicon Valley Mountain View office:
Back @ the tower in Munich ... |
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05-22-2021, 09:25 PM | #570 |
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Risky Prediction:
ICE will be around for a long while, but not due to necessity, rather as art. I've been talking to some people lately and an idea occurred to me, or maybe just came into crystal clear focus: The World will switch to BEVs, but not due to the standard reasons, rather because cars are now tech and software doesn't work well with ICE. That simple. Put batteries and e-engines into a car and the hardware is now an instantly upgradable platform; not just for tech features, but in the mechanics of the car itself ... and this paradigm is not only what people have become familiar with in their other personal devices (phones, TV, air purifiers, home lighting, whatever), it's what they EXPECT. and that more than anything else will drive the switch. And when you look at it fully and completely that way, you realize every automaker SUCKS at software - and, TBH, even Tesla. They may be the best at it, but they're still leagues away from where they could be. Which brings us back to Apple. I've been a doubter that Apple will unveil a consumer vehicle anytime soon ... and despite the rumors, there still doesn't seem to be any good reason to believe they will including Tim Cook's recent comments in a Kara Swisher Sway podcast ... Nevertheless, the day Apple DOES announce a consumer car, Tesla's market value will plummet billions ... immediately ... Anyhoo, what's this have to do with ICE? Well, there's only one other personal device I can think of that software ate, but didn't destroy the underlying industry: luxury watches. And not just luxury - Seiko has a pretty nice business selling sub-$300 automatics and of course there's Casio and others plus a zillion sub-$500 microbrands. I suspect if software eats cars (and I think it is), the same thing will happen there as with watches: a niche of mechanical art nerds will pop up and provide more than enough business to 1,001 boutique automakers. I think the V8 will live on. |
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