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Looking at whether a recent rebound in the shares can be maintained
Thursday 02 Feb 2023 Author: Danni Hewson

There’s no denying that 2022 was a torrid year for Tesla (TSLA:NASDAQ) shareholders. The stock fell 65% leaving many nursing big losses. The changing fortunes of the electric car maker, which had become a retail investor favourite, will have been discombobulating as its share price performance since 2020 had delivered spectacular returns.

But alongside tales of Tesla-made ISA millionaires there were plenty of commentators who warned the bubble was likely to burst, that the company was massively overvalued, and any setbacks would result in the stock underperforming.

In 2022 those commentators were proved right. China’s zero-Covid policy not only impacted production in Asia but it also dented sales there, just at the time that raging inflation was eating into discretionary income in the West.

As demand slowed, and with its boss seemingly distracted with his new social media toy Twitter, the company had to take serious strategic action and reach for the sale stickers.

HAS CUTTING PRICES WORKED?

Cutting prices is a strategy that appears to have paid off, at least for now. Tesla’s fourth quarter earnings boasted record profits, record deliveries and a forward order book that Elon Musk referred to as ‘high’. He noted there are ‘a vast number of people who want to buy a Tesla car but can’t afford it’ so the recent price changes are likely to widen the pool of potential buyers.

The company’s share price enjoyed its best week in almost 10 years before the earnings update and more than one recommendation jumped from hold to buy, with the latter camp now overwhelmingly in the majority. But there are still a number of Tesla bears with five analysts keeping their feet planted firmly in the sell camp.



PLENTY OF POTENTIAL POTHOLES

It’s not unusual for there to be a spread of broker recommendations but it does raise questions about Tesla’s outlook.

The EV giant expects to continue with its growth spurt, though its own forecasts suggest at a slightly slower pace. In 2022 it delivered just over 1.3 million vehicles and this year the company is forecasting a 37% increase to 1.8 million, though the company’s controversial boss believes two million is well within reach.

But using price to stoke demand has already had an impact on margins which were shaved to a two-year low of 25.9% in the last quarter and those discounts were only just beginning to filter through.

Speculation mounted that the move to cut prices wouldn’t just affected profitability it would also spur on competitors to follow suit and Ford (F:NYSE) was the first to jump, cutting the price on its Mustang Mach-E crossover. And competition might just be the strongest headwind to buffet Tesla over the next year.

The car industry has been in a state of flux as the world transitions from the combustion engine. Established players have been slow to act something which gave Tesla a distinct advantage. But that advantage has been eroded by time. Tesla is no longer the new kid on the block, the disruptive start-up with the wind in its sales.

China’s BYD (1211:HKG) overtook Tesla last year as the leading seller of electric cars. Traditional giants like Hyundai (005380:KRX), Ford and General Motors (GM:NYSE) have put their foot on the accelerator and new entrants like Rivian (RIVN:NASDAQ) and Lucid (LCID:NASDAQ) in the US and China’s Nio (NIO:SGX) are giving customers greater options.

Tesla has promised new models but put them on the back burner to focus on supply chain issues and boosting production leaving investors dangling and customers perhaps a little bored. Tesla now says the next generation is in the works and that the long awaited Cybertruck pick up will begin production later this year.

A MARCH INVESTOR DAY COULD BE CRUCIAL

The investor day at the beginning of March could quiet many critics but it won’t do much to sweeten the bad taste left in many new Tesla owner’s mouths. Nobody likes to miss out on a bargain or find they’ve paid over the odds for something they could have got much cheaper if they’d just waited a few more weeks.

And a week is a long time on markets with shares in the company still firmly riding the roller coaster.

Can Tesla’s pricing strategy mitigate softening consumer demand? Will the company’s divisive CEO ultimately be found to be hero or villain? And has future growth already been priced in? We could be closer to some answers by the end of 2023.

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