Chart Of The Day: Tesla Shares Headed To $1,000 (And Beyond)

 | Jan 26, 2021 14:41

On Wednesday, Jan. 27, electric carmaker Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) is scheduled to report Q4 2020 earnings results after the closing bell. We expect an EPS of $1.04, on revenue of $10.47 billion, versus last year’s $2.14 EPS and $7.38 billion for the corresponding quarter.

Clearly, YoY EPS expectations are considerably lower than last year. So why did Tesla shares notch a new record yesterday, gaining 4% to close at $880.80 ahead of the Palo Alto, California-based company's next quarterly report?

A number of reasons. For starters, Tesla’s overall success has always been based on faith in the company and its charismatic founder, CEO Elon Musk. Indeed, the same kind of investor—someone who doesn't care about traditional methods of determing measurable value—is likely also behind the breathtaking ascent of Bitcoin. Jim Cramer, the host of CNBC's Mad Money, has said it’s young investors who are driving up Tesla's stock as they are willing to pay any price to help Musk achieve his dream and be part of the effort at the same time.

Additionally, if investors were willing to buy the company’s stock when it was divorced from fundamentals, now that the electric vehicle manufacturer has posted its fifth quarter of profitability in a row, as of its Q3 report, why wouldn't they be all-in now?

Further bolstering the stock, the EV stalwart was added to the S&P 500 Index at the end of December, a prestigious club that provided additional cachet and a stamp of legitimacy. Plus, on a more practical level, Tesla's inclusion on the broad benchmark also forced fund managers to buy tens of millions of shares in order to add them to the $5.4 trillion in index funds that track the S&P 500.

As well, Tesla’s vehicle deliveries, a key metric for the company that historically had missed its targets, surged during Q4 2020.

Recently, Paul Pelosi, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s husband, bought up to $1 million worth of stock options, betting that Tesla will rise. With the Democrats now in the White House, and holding majority control of both houses of Congress, he's well aware that green initiatives are high on the new government's agenda.

Analyst Ben Kallo of Baird Investment Banking has doubled his target on Tesla stock, providing a price target of $728 per share, up from his previous $488 call. Kallo upgraded his call based on the company's expanded manufacturing capacity with operations now in Shanghai as well as new facilities being built in Berlin and Texas. Kallo also predicts that Musk may overhaul his entire enterprise, combining all his companies—which also include SpaceX and Neuralink—into one business.

After our bullish call in August, which was realized, the supply and demand dynamics defied our expectation of a pullback in December as the stock's rise accelerated. Current market forces point to a continued trajectory higher.

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