Tesla bulls and bears can debate almost anything from the quality of quarterly earnings to the qualities of CEO Elon Musk. But whether an analyst or investor considers Tesla stock a Buy, Hold, Hold, or Sell, boils down to numbers.
Take the Sell recommendation from HSBC analyst Michael Tyndall. He launched coverage of the shares in a Wednesday evening report. His bearish take and $146 price target helped send Tesla (ticker: TSLA) stock down 5.2% while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite fell 0.8% and 0.9%, respectively.
The coverage initiation report runs to 110 pages and is as informative and well thought out as most Wall Street reports. In all those pages, one number is key: 13%.
That’s Tyndall’s projected average annual growth rate for sales in Tesla’s car business between 2023 and 2030. In 2023, Tesla is expected to sell about 1.8 million cars for an average price of about $45,000 each. In 2030, Tyndall’s numbers are 5.8 million and $32,000, respectively.
Canaccord analyst George Gianarikas is a Tesla Bull. He rates shares Buy and has a $267 price target. He projects closer to 20% average annual sales growth. By 2030, he projects about 6.6 million cars sold with an average vehicle price in the range of $45,000.
That seven percentage point difference between the two analysts really adds up. It’s the difference between a $190 billion car business and a $300 billion car business by 2030.
Future Fund Active ETF (FFND) co-founder Gary Black is more even more bullish than Gianarikas. He projects 10.2 million units sold in 2030 at an average price of about $47,000. That’s about 29% average annual growth for the coming seven years, ending with a $480 billion car business at the end of the decade.
Tyndall’s Sell rating relies on “classic reversion to the mean,” says Black. Mean reversion is the idea that, in the long run, growth rates should converge to some industry average. It has some validity. It’s hard to grow faster than an entire industry for a long, long time. Still, Black says the approach “seems more like how one would value a slow growth-legacy auto company than a high growth tech stock.”
To some extent, these examples illustrate why valuing growth stocks is so hard. The difference between 15% and 25% average annual growth stretched out over a few years is hard to fathom. Over seven years, growing at a higher rate essentially results in a company twice as large.
The same calculation for a company growing either 3% or 5% a year, which is the same percentage difference between 15% and 25%, results in a company that’s about 15% bigger.
That’s why it’s useful for investors to take a step back once in a while and focus on something simple. If an investor believes Tesla will sell five million cars in 2030 they probably aren’t going to like the stock very much. At seven million they are comfortable with where the stock trades today. At 10 million they love shares.
Barron’s recommended buying Tesla stock in early January when shares were trading at was trading near $113, believing that investors had become too worried about EV pricing and growth. Near $200 a share, Tesla stock is less attractive than it was, but we see no reason to abandon it either. There is lots of growth ahead for EVs and Tesla remains a leader.
Tesla stock rose 2.2 on Friday. S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite futures rose 1.6% and 2.1%, respectively.
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