I Think People Are Misunderstanding Why Tesla [TSLA] Is Valued So Highly
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I love looking at auto sales charts — and creating them — and we do so somewhat obsessively as it concerns electric vehicles and Tesla. From a static point of view today, looking at Tesla’s global sales versus the global sales of Audi, BMW, or Mercedes-Benz (let alone Volkswagen Group or Toyota) and then looking at Tesla’s [TSLA] market cap compared to those companies can leave you scratching your head. [Full disclosure: I own stock in Tesla. And I don’t expect to sell it for a long time.]
One way of trying to reconcile the equation is by assuming that “the market” (Wall Street) expects sales of the other automakers to drop while Tesla’s sales rise. Still, there’s a lot of ground to cover to go from 367,200 annual sales to 10,974,600 annual sales. Visualizing big numbers can help, so here’s a chart:
Note: The chart above is interactive. It may not show well on some devices. If it doesn’t show well for you, I advise viewing it on a different computer (preferably one that doesn’t fit in your pocket). Alternatively, you can see the static chart here.
Keep in mind that Volkswagen Group itself wants to be selling 3 million 100% electric vehicles a year by 2025.
I presume that you can genuinely conclude that large automakers are going to collapse under their own weight while Tesla rises in a sharp transition to electric vehicles. The Osborne effect is a real thing and Capital One has already acknowledged that the resale value of Germany luxury cars are getting slammed by the Tesla Model 3’s competitiveness. However, I think the market still sees widespread collapse of traditional auto companies as an unlikely fringe case. I don’t think this alone explains Tesla’s $100 billion market cap.
As our writer Frugal Moogal elegantly explained a couple of weeks ago when Tesla’s market cap was surprisingly already at a (now lowly) $88.6 billion, Tesla is more than an automaker. It has an energy division selling and renting solar panels, rooftop solar tiles, and battery storage systems. It has a massive network of EV charging infrastructure in the US, Canada, Europe, China, Japan, Australia, and elsewhere. And it has its autonomy R&D, which Moogal felt could conservatively be valued at $19 billion since that’s what Cruise Automation was valued at last year. All of these things start to add up, and as one very popular article pointed out 11 days ago, Tesla’s full-stack approach is unmatched in the auto industry.
I do think much of Tesla’s valuation is a combination of all of these things, and much of this is basically ignored by people who can’t understand why Tesla is worth more than GM and Ford combined. However, my thoughts as to why there’s the vast difference come down to three things in addition to the “full stack” argument.