AI Summary:

Tesla’s 2024 financial results were disappointing, with several key points highlighted:

  • Automotive Revenues: Fell by 8% in Q4 2024 compared to Q4 2023, totaling $19.8 billion.
  • Energy and Storage Revenues: More than doubled, growing by 113% to $3 billion in Q4 2024.
  • Services: Grew by 31% in Q4 2024, contributing $2.8 billion.
  • Total Revenue: Increased by 2% in Q4 2024, but income fell by 23%, with an operating margin of 6.2%.
  • Net Profits: Dropped by 71% to $2.3 billion in Q4 2024.
  • Annual Performance: Automotive revenues decreased by 6% to $77 billion in 2024. Energy generation and storage increased by 67% to $10 billion. Services grew by 27%, bringing in $10.5 billion.
  • Gross Profits: Fell by 1%, with net profits dropping by 53% to $7.1 billion for the year.
  • Free Cash Flow: Decreased by 18% to $3.6 billion.
  • Regulatory Credits: $2.8 billion of profit came from selling regulatory credits, not from core business activities.
  • Future Predictions: Tesla expects energy storage revenues to grow by at least 50% year-over-year and aims to grow automotive sales by more than 60% in 2025.

Despite the poor financial results, Tesla’s share price increased by 103% over the same period.

  • @Gradually_Adjusting
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    1738 days ago

    Value investing is basically dead, isn’t it? Am I crazy? How can you objectively evaluate a company’s value, notice it is undervalued, and then trade accordingly when price action does not even slightly track the company’s value?

    • @[email protected]
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      37 days ago

      Value investing is basically dead, isn’t it?

      You’re looking at a too short time frame. The famous tulip bubble lasted for a decade, too.

    • @cevn
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      1418 days ago

      The investors are banking on Elon looting the Govt coffers into Tesla. I can’t deny the chances based on the other crap we are seeing.

      • @danc4498
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        298 days ago

        Exclusive contracts at 20% mark up. Can’t wait for all police vehicles to switch over to teslas.

        • @[email protected]
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          218 days ago

          I’d support that: the new excuses as to why a suspect escaped would be fantastic.

          “Well, I would have caught him but my car died for some reason and I couldn’t get out.”

          “Well, I would have caught him but I hit a bump and half my car fell off.”

          “Well, I would have caught him, but my car caught fire and killed my partner.”

          “Well, I would haved caught him but it was raining so my bumper fell off and punctured my tire.”

          • @danc4498
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            48 days ago

            Don’t worry, none of these would make the news.

      • @Gradually_Adjusting
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        298 days ago

        True enough. A bet on any tech stocks right now is probably safe on that basis - but I expect they really do plan to crash the stock market at some point… It would make sense if you wanted to consolidate ownership cheaply.

      • @[email protected]
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        78 days ago

        They’re also banking on Elon staying alive for the next 4y which is a risky bet given how he immediately antagonised the MAGA crowd on H1Bs.

        • @[email protected]
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          158 days ago

          The MAGA crowd hates just about everybody. The last time they did anything of note was the 1/6 insurrection, and that was with the help of Dear Leader.

      • @Lauchs
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        68 days ago

        That but also removing green subsidies helps Tesla as it’s further ahead than other electric car rivals. Also, less safety regulations likely brings it closer to fully autonomous driving.

        • @cevn
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          17 days ago

          deleted by creator

    • @FlowVoid
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      178 days ago

      Value investing isn’t dead. There are tons of value investors, and they aren’t the ones buying Tesla.

      • @Gradually_Adjusting
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        218 days ago

        My point is, if this is how markets react to worsening sales and an actually insane CEO how can you trust a rational bet to pay off?

        • @[email protected]
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          6 days ago

          How does the first exclude the second? That’s like saying: how can I trust train travel if F1 cars drive 300km/h. They’re different things.

        • @FlowVoid
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          138 days ago

          Value investors don’t invest in Tesla, so you should not expect its share price to reflect fundamentals.

          But they do invest in stocks like Coca Cola and American Express, so you should expect the share prices of those companies to better reflect fundamentals.

          • @Gradually_Adjusting
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            88 days ago

            That’s just another way of saying buyer sentiment is the only thing that matters, in which case we’re back to square one.

            • @FlowVoid
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              8 days ago

              If you’re a value investor then you believe that the actual value of a company depends on its current and future earnings and the market price will tend towards the actual value in the long run.

              But naturally there are other factors that also influence the market price. In fact, the whole point of value investing is to find stocks that are “underpriced”. For various reasons, they are currently priced at a discount to their actual value. Those are the stocks you should buy, and you should expect their price to increase.

              Conversely, for various reasons some stocks are “overpriced”, like Tesla. You should not buy those, because you expect their price to decrease in the long run.

              A corollary is that value investors expect seemingly irrational price movements like we see with Tesla. If share prices perfectly reflected fundamentals, then it would be impossible to find a “good deal”.

              • @Gradually_Adjusting
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                28 days ago

                Right. So anyway, the market does often appear oversensitive to buzz and under-responsive to fundamentals. What’s your take on market reforms? Are there any changes you’d like to see, regulatory or otherwise?

                • @FlowVoid
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                  8 days ago

                  I don’t care if the market is under responsive to fundamentals. That just means some investors are exercising poor judgment by paying too much attention to irrelevant factors. It also gives an opportunity to investors with better judgment.

                  • @Gradually_Adjusting
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                    18 days ago

                    Do you get why this is starting to feel very circular? If not, please don’t trouble yourself to respond. Sincerely.

            • @AA5B
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              17 days ago

              Pretty much the definition of bubble stocks. If you don’t want emotion driven stocks, don’t ride the hype train. There are many many more stock opportunities, most of whose value is related to actual facts

    • @CosmoNova
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      87 days ago

      I wondered that a while ago when Tesla was worth more than many other car makers combined while producing far less vehicles than any single one of them. And I remember people telling me about projections and expectations and that it’s only a matter of time until everyone drives a Tesla basically. Sounded like mass hysteria to me back then because the rest of the world won’t just sit there quietly and let Tesla have a monopoly. People bought shares because they rose rapidly in value, causing even more people to buy shares. It’s a pyramid scheme like so many things these days and people have no problem with it apparently. They love gambling and playing lottery. Value investing is too boring for them.

    • @Cheems
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      67 days ago

      It’s gambling

    • @AA5B
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      37 days ago

      That’s not new to Tesla. Avoid bubble stocks. Avoid penny stocks. Buy “stodgy”

      • @Gradually_Adjusting
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        47 days ago

        I’m not into Tesla stock. I’m not just here to whine about a single stock not doing what I want, it’s that I think price action in general is too irrational. I’ve got an axe to grind here and it goes beyond which stocks to pick.

        Huge ETFs and algorithmic trading makes too many tickers move all the same way. This harms price discovery. And don’t get me started on off-exchange trading; This month, off-exchange volume exceeded that of lit markets.

    • @[email protected]
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      -127 days ago

      There’s value investing and there’s speculation. If Tesla can make a robot that can mop the floor, even this seemingly ridiculous valuation will look like a bargain. Have to remember, Tesla is not a car company. They are an AI and green tech company. Cars are just their largest activity to date.

      I am concerned about Elon though. I think he’s a visionary, I think he’s valuable, but I also think he’s spread far too thin and he’s losing it as a result. Tesla, SpaceX, Twitter, xAI, Neuralink, and his political efficiency project. All of these are full-time 100hr/week jobs. Even if you assume he literally never sees his gaggle of children, hell even if you assume he never sleeps, there’s literally not enough hours in the day. And I think he is thus blind to the fact that his antics are costing him support for the bigger mission.