Chart Of The Day: After A 34% Drop, Tesla Is Heading For A Rebound

 | Sep 09, 2020 15:03

Since its Aug. 31 record peak, Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) shares have been in a serious downward spiral. Yesterday, the stock dropped 21.1%—it was the single worst day ever for the equity.

That one-day selloff would be enough to put the stock in a bear market. However, Tuesday's dive occurred on the heels of three days of additional selling, putting the stock 33.8% below its Aug. 31 record peak of $498.32 (the 5:1 split adjusted price).

The selloff is occurring amid a perfect storm for Tesla, in its capacity as a prominent member of the already troubled tech sector which is currently being dumped by investors, but also after it was rejected by the S&P 500 when the index rejiggered some of its listed companies on Aug. 31. 

Not being carried in the SPX doesn't seem like that big a deal though. But not being included on the benchmark that lists some of the US's biggest companies means that fund managers tracking the broad index would be forced to buy Tesla on its own, if they wanted to buy it at all. 

It seems that investors had already priced in Tesla's inclusion on the S&P since it met the appropriate criteria—it's headquartered in the US, has a market cap well over the minimum $8.2 billion required, was highly liquid and had finally reached a point where the sum of its earnings for the trailing previous four quarters was positive. Some are saying that's why the shares enjoyed such a steep run-up ahead of the reshuffle.

Many consider the price of Tesla shares—even before the recent up-surge—to bear little resemblance to its underlying fundamentals. Nonetheless, we were bullish on Tesla in mid-August (before the split), and we're bullish on it once again.

Technicals show why we think this could be a good point of rebound for the stock.