The average price of a used Tesla has declined 19 months in a row, moving from a record high of $67,900 in July 2022 to a record low of $33,913 today. That’s a 50% decline. $TSLA pic.twitter.com/WCUUmBBvi8
— Charlie Bilello (@charliebilello) February 11, 2024
Adding to the list of potential distractions for Tesla investors is the fact that Musk, who runs at least four major enterprises beyond the carmaker, is facing a ruling from U.S. Magistrate Judge Laurel Beeler, who ordered the billionaire to testify in person to a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission probe into his $44 billion purchase of Twitter.
Musk, who closed the Twitter deal in late 2022 before renaming the microblogging platform X, has thus far refused to cooperate with the SEC’s investigation into whether he followed securities rules in announcing his intention to buy the social media network in the spring of that year.
Musk has also made no secret of his longer-term vision for Tesla and its ability to leverage AI technologies.
Musk, who currently owns around 13% of Tesla following a series of major share sales to fund his Twitter purchase in 2022, said last month that he would need to build his AI and robotics vision outside the Tesla structure unless he could acquire at least a 25% voting stake.
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Tesla: Cloudy with a chance of long-term gains
Wedbush analyst Dan Ives, however, who carries an outperform rating with a $315 price target on Tesla, remains firm in his long-term conviction for the stock.
“We could not disagree more with the ultranegative Tesla narrative building and forming a black cloud over the stock,” he said.
“While the next few months are clearly a bit cloudy for the Tesla story and overall EV demand, longer term our view is that by the end of the decade ~20% of autos will be EV with autonomous and [Full-Self-Driving] a reality and not a dream/aspiration.” Full-Self-Driving is Tesla’s premium driver-assistance system.
“We believe despite not committing to it on the [fourth quarter earnings conference call in late January], the vast majority of price cuts are now done with gradual price increases/margin expansion likely over the next six months,” Ives added.
Tesla shares were marked 0.3% lower in premarket trading to indicate an opening bell price of $193.00 each, a move that would leave the stock down more than 22% so far this year.
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