Cars and Drivers
Tesla Is Worth More Than All Big Car Companies in the World Combined
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Since mid-November, the market cap of Tesla Inc. (NASDAQ: TSLA) has risen from around $382.4 billion to around $615 billion as of Monday’s closing bell. That’s an increase of around 60%. Among other automakers listed on U.S. exchanges, the best performer was Honda Motor Co. Ltd. (NYSE: HMC), which has posted a gain of nearly 18% over the same period.
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The question on everyone’s lips is some version of “Can this be real?” Tesla’s revenue for the past 12 months totals $28 billion. Honda’s totals nearly $125 billion, while Toyota Motor Corp. (NYSE: TM), the world’s second-largest carmaker by market cap, posted 12-month revenue of nearly $250 billion.
Ford Motor Co. (NYSE: F), with $131 billion in revenues, General Motors Co. (NYSE: GM), with $115 billion, and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles N.V. (NYSE: FCAU), with $108 billion in revenue, all hauled in more than three-times Tesla’s revenue.
The following chart, from Axios, shows how Tesla’s market cap of $615 billion is larger than that of the world’s seven largest automakers combined.
Tesla’s share price has been driven by the overall liquidity in equity markets, and there appears to be little connection between the equity markets and the real world. In the real world, GDP growth is expected to be negative this year. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) is forecasting a 4.4% year-over-year decline in global gross domestic product and a U.S. decline of 4.3%.
Partly the disconnect between Tesla and the real world is due to the fact that some investors and analysts see the company as an automaker while many more see it as a technology company. Automakers build real stuff that shrinks operating margins; tech companies often don’t have that problem.
Tesla’s operating margin over the past 12 months is around 6.3%. Ford’s operating margin for the past 12 months is negative, GM’s is nearly 3% and Toyota’s is around 6%. Microsoft, however, has an operating margin of around 38%, and Apple’s operating margin is about 25%.
Morgan Stanley’s auto industry analyst Adam Jonas notes that “Tesla is a car company in the way Apple is a phone company.” What that means is that Tesla is building (or at least attempting to) an ecosystem like Apple’s where the company’s products (its cars, trucks, software and services) are so tightly-integrated that once customers have bought in, they’ll stay there for a long time.
Tesla may never reach Microsoft’s operating margin, but it’s not out of the question that it could approach Apple’s. Eventually, Tesla will have to deliver on what is still a promise. The company will have to “grow into” its valuation, but it won’t do that by building more cars. It will do that by building a better experience.
The stock traded down about 1.8% at $637.83 early Tuesday, in a 52-week range of $70.10 to $695.00. The consensus 12-month price target on the stock is $401.47.
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