Tesla shares on the decline since Elon Musk got to Washington

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Tesla shares on the decline since Elon Musk got to Washington


Tesla’s stock has never had a stretch this red.

For seven straight weeks, since Elon Musk went to Washington to join the Trump administration, shares in his automaker have declined, closing Friday at $US270.48 ($428). It’s the longest such losing streak for Tesla in its 15 years as a public company.

Tesla shares finished the week down more than 10 per cent and at their lowest level since November 5, Election Day, when they closed at $US251.44. Since the stock peaked at almost $US480 on December 17, it has lost well over $US800b in market cap.

Several Wall Street firms last week, including Bank of America, Baird and Goldman Sachs, cut their price targets on Tesla.

In slashing their target from $US490 to $3US80, analysts at Bank of America cited concerns about the company’s falling new vehicle sales and the lack of a recent update from Musk on a “low-cost model.”

Goldman Sachs, which cut its price target on the stock to $US320 from $US345, also pointed to falling electric vehicle sales for Tesla in the first two months of the year across several markets in Europe, China and parts of the US.

The Goldman analysts noted that Tesla faces “a tough competitive environment for FSD” in China, where key competitors “do not generally require a separate software purchase for smart driving features.” FSD, or Full Self-Driving (Supervised), is Tesla’s partially automated driving system, which the company sells as a premium option in the U.S.

Baird added Tesla to its “bearish fresh picks” this week, with analysts at the firm writing that “production downtime” will complicate “the supply-side of the equation” for Tesla as the company shifts to manufacturing the new version of its Model Y SUV.

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