Tesla is Transforming the Car Business and Bankrupting the Shorts

This year’s short squeeze on Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) will go down in history.

Here's How to Play the Tesla Stock Short Squeeze

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Shares have more than doubled in value, just since the start of 2020, and have gone parabolic since February began. They closed at $887 each on Feb. 4, giving the electric car and battery maker a market capitalization of $160 billion. That’s more than three times General Motors (NYSE:GM) and four times Ford (NYSE:F), on less than one-fifth of each company’s revenue.

Despite this, 24% of the company’s outstanding shares . This means people were borrowing shares from the market.

As 19th century speculator (and eventual bankrupt) Daniel Drew put it, “He who sells what isn’t his’n, must buy it back or go to pris’n.”

The bears got a little respite overnight, as Tesla fell back 2.6% to open at $864. In early morning trading Feb. 5, shares are back below $800, down over 13%.

More Than a Short Squeeze

While this may be the  there’s more going on here.

Tesla has proven CEO Elon Musk’s point, that . Electric vehicles lack the complex motors and transmissions of gas-powered cars. In theory they’re simpler to make. Utilities are now scaled to serve electric cars. They can use the business, since efficiency has cut other forms of demand.

Every big car company now claims to be working on electric cars. General Motors advertised an monster car at the Super Bowl. Ford has announced .

The Batteries

But where are their batteries going to come from? Tesla has lined up deals with . It bought Maxwell Technologies for over $200 million last year in the technology.

Musk says batteries are now the “gating factor” for car makers, since

. The company is planning for a “Battery Day” in April to discuss what it’s doing both to ramp up production and improve battery life. Tesla says its latest battery lets the Model Y SUV travel four miles on a single kilowatt-hour of power, with .

It’s Tesla’s lead in battery production and technology that now has it trading like a tech stock, not a manufacturer. Even with its latest run-up, the stock is trading at a lower price-to-sales ratio than in 2015. There’s one more thing. The company’s despised solar power systems may soon come of age. The company deployed 54 megawatts of solar power during the fourth quarter, .

The whole car industry is now following Tesla. Tesla has the industry’s second-largest market cap, behind only Toyota (NYSE:TM), worth $201 billion on about $287 billion of sales. Toyota is for the Tokyo Summer Olympics about a solid-state battery. If it can scale production, it could pose a real challenge. If it’s just a demonstration, Tesla’s ceiling is unlimited.

The Bottom Line on Tesla Stock

There is no way I can justify buying Tesla stock here, but I’m cheering the company on anyway.

Tesla has transformed the car business, just as Musk said it would. In the process it has also sunk the oil business. It’s no coincidence that shares in Exxon Mobil (NYSE:XOM) fell below $60 on Feb. 4. If oil loses the car business, it has no floor.

While oil’s death is great in theory, it’s going to be . It’s going to shake up the world in ways Tesla shorts can barely imagine, and it has only just begun.

is a financial and technology journalist. He is the author of the environmental thriller , available at the Amazon Kindle store. Write him at danablankenhorn@gmail.com or follow him on Twitter at . As of this writing he owned no shares in companies mentioned in this story. 

has been a financial and technology journalist since 1978. He is the author of , available at the Amazon Kindle store. Tweet him at , connect with him on or subscribe to his .


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