Chaos has always worked in Tesla's favor — but that could be about to change
Elon Musk
Elon Musk

(Chaos! Love it!AP)

Over the past decade, Tesla has been very successful at creating two products: sexy electric luxury cars and frequent chaos.

The first product is self-evident — just look at a Tesla Model S sedan or Model X SUV. Take a ride in one. The whole experience is aesthetically and emotionally thrilling, overlaid with the delightful impression that you're helping to save the world by emitting exactly zero greenhouse gasses from the non-existent tailpipe.

The second sounds bad, but it isn't. A long time ago, I took a deep look into so-called "chaos theory" and learned with the right intellectual framework, chaos can be understood as a sort of dynamic orderliness, a natural process governed by complicated mathematics that demands a lot of intense thinking to understand.

That's Tesla in a nutshell. And that's why Wall Street has been struggling so mightily to model the company over the past few years, with analysts' price targets ranging from a bearish $150-per-share to a far more bullish $400-ish predictions.

Tesla is hard to define

Tesla gigafactory
Tesla gigafactory

(Tesla's Gigafactory in Nevada.YouTube/Matthew Roberts)

Tesla also proposes a definitional challenge: the biggest part of the business is cars, and the auto industry isn't difficult to figure out. But Tesla is also an energy storage company, a battery company, a software firm, and provider of electric-vehicle charging, and now a solar-energy provider, following the 2016 acquisition of SolarCity. There's a connection to CEO Elon Musk's space-exploration company, SpaceX, and Musk is given to creating adjacent projects on a whim. Think of the Hyperloop or the new "Boring Company," the latter set up to dig vast tunnels under Los Angeles to alleviate freeway traffic.

The chaos has been useful. Musk is comfortable with it, and it's enabled Tesla to sustain an elevated market cap — it pushed passed $40 billion during a market rally early this year — and to distract analysts and experts from dealing with Tesla's most basic problem: that at its core, Tesla is a carmaker that's not very good (yet) at making cars.

This isn't to say that Tesla makes bad cars. As Consumer Reports recently noted, Tesla is the most beloved car brand in America. Tesla owners adore its cars, and Tesla has done yeoman work over the past two years both at ramping up production to nearly 100,000 vehicles annually and addressing reliability issues. At Business Insider, we've driven just about everything the company sells, and we've been uniformly impressed.

Missing its marks

But Tesla hasn't hit the manufacturing marks that one would expect from a 10-year-old car company. What a big automaker can easily achieve in a year, Tesla takes far longer to match. Witness the Chevy Bolt: General Motors revealed, engineered, launched, and is now mass-producing a $30,000 EV with a range of 238 miles on a single charge — and it accomplished all this in about one year. If Tesla is lucky, it will hit full production of its own Model 3 by sometime next year, taking anywhere from six-to-12 months longer.