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Did that back in the 80's in Louisiana while working the oil patch...... AG Edwards pitched the "Limited Partnership Deal"....You wanna buy 32,000 shares?
I’ll make you a deal.
P
They aren’t servicing the loans. I believe Santander is the participating bank. I’m not sure what deal is/was offered but I greatly disagree with your last point. I would much rather see Tesla offer 0.99% rates vs. reducing sales price. All OEMs are moving to 0%.
Someone is paying for that rate gap, and I very much doubt it's the bank since they are in the business of making money on loans.
There is very little effective difference between offering below-market rates vs cutting the transaction price. Both are being done to lower monthly payments to a level that is attractive to more consumers at the cost of decreasing margin; this is very basic microeconomics. This isn't the first time that the industry has gone through this cycle and normally there's a short-term benefit at the cost of bottom-line margin in the long run. We'll see if things are really different this time.
Yes - it’s accounting - but the psychological impact on the consumer is huge.
Yep, which is why General Motors leaned so heavily on such games in the early 2000s. Here's an ad from October 2001:
Later came the "employee pricing for everyone". You know what came after that, right? But damn, there were some great sales numbers for several years. They just didn't bring in enough profit to keep the lights on.
This shouldn't matter, since all the Very Smart People on Twitter have decided that Telsa is no longer a car company, and thus its declining automotive sales volume and plummeting margins are no reason for worry.
Vanguard, the low-cost investing pioneer, will now charge $100 to close an account — unless you’re a multimillionaire
As of the last earnings, based on Tesla FCF and cash on hand, how much run way do they have?
Don't know - that's a prediction, and those are famously difficult. All I can say is that things happen fast in the auto industry during macro declines, and Tesla more than ever looks like a very normal car company.
Those cancelation fees are not going over well with the consumers.Cheap. I rolled my external accounts to Robinhood and paid $250/each.
What we are witnessing is a market that is "Betting on the jockey and not the horse"...Elon isn't here. It isn't a launch release or anything. Just 1 of 8 Cybertrucks in America are on display in my city.
Nvidia passes Microsoft and Apple as largest market cap. Combined, the three are valued at $9.9 trillion, 21.5% of the entire market capitalization of the S&P 500. The three are today LARGER than the capitalization of the ENTIRE S&P in September 2011, not a market low.
Including Google, Amazon, Meta and Tesla, the Magnificent 7 have a $16 trillion combined market value, 34% of the S&P 500 and LARGER than the ENTIRE S&P as recently as February 2016, just over 8 years ago and most definitely nowhere near a market bottom.
Nvidia is valued at 42x and 78x trailing sales and earnings on an unsustainable 54% net profit margin.
Microsoft is valued at 14x trailing sales and 39x earnings on a 36.4% net margin.
Apple is valued at 8.6x and 33x trailing sales and earnings on a record 26.3% net margin.
These are crazy valuations for very large companies that can grow sales and earnings nowhere near as rapidly as they did over the past one and two decades.
I'm excited - this is completely unsustainable, and yet there is no obvious end in sight so this is probably going to keep ripping upwards. The bigger it gets, the harder it's going to implode, and so I hope this continues as long as possible.
The Tesla killers are mostly Chinese EV manufactures that actually make cars , not the list above that sell hype , and chinese just got slapped 100% tariffs , to protect Tesla from any competition
Yep, conveniently left BYD off that list.The Tesla killers are mostly Chinese EV manufactures that actually make cars , not the list above that sell hype , and chinese just got slapped 100% tariffs , to protect Tesla from any competition
Explain the difference between BYD and those on the list.Yep, conveniently left BYD off that list.
Well, at the end of the trading day tomorrow....... Will NVDA close up or down ? TSLA, up or down ?Quadruple witching tomorrow brings a record $5.1T in equity options expiry. Note, close to $1T are in single stock options. Flash PMI’s out as well. Crazy potential vol…sleepy post holiday trading today saw over 1/2 billion shares of NVDA traded.
If anything manufacturers that also make EV and Hybrids vs only EV are far more future proofed than Tesla1,584% since IPO, -27% from high. You dopes don't can't differentiate BEV vs. other manufactures who also produce BEVs. I am not sure if your "conveniently" makes sense.
Explain the difference between BYD and those on the list.
Bought the dip today.
P
Explain the difference between BYD and those on the list.
It's a successful company?
What's crazy is that even Tesla is struggling to find additional growth as governments at various levels drop $10-15k in cash on the hood. Normally we don't see this kind of broad wipe-out until after subsidies expire.
None of this matters, since I've recently been informed that Tesla is no longer a car company or a sustainable energy company but rather an AI company and should be traded as such.
A "Flash in the Pan"...... Meanwhile those "Dirty Job's" will always pay well and allow a family man to put food on the table for his family.
Solar powered ?
At least partially given all Giga factories have solar arrays on top.
Jesus, what a waste of ground for something that ruins the environment. I'd rather see a nuclear reactor. Nuclear doesn't worry about snow, HAIL, clouds or rain, it just works and is efficient.I think Elon claimed that the initial install will draw 130 MW and up to 500 MW in the future.
Solar produces about 1 MW per 10 acres, so covering the entire 2500-acre footprint of Giga Texas would be a starting point. In other words, there will be a lot of fossil fuels powering that particular installation.
Because... Why not?
Markets are starting to price in a Trump win which "should" be actually good for the economy and not in a "lets print 5 trillion dollars and pretend everything is ok" economy.