Why Tesla stock has been on a wild, wild ride

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If you’re looking for a screwball company that has a screwball chief executive officer and a screwball stock price, I can tell you just where to go: Tesla, Inc.

The screwball CEO, of course, is Elon Musk, who three years ago also crowned himself Tesla’s (TSLA) techno-king, whatever that title is supposed to mean.

Tesla itself is a screwball auto company that has also engaged in a variety of unusual non-automotive activities, such as selling solar power to residences after shelling out $2.5 billion of stock in 2016 to buy SolarCity, a company founded by two of Musk’s cousins.

And when it comes to its stock price, Tesla is Screwball Central. If you buy its shares, the only thing you know is that you’re likely to get a wild ride. However, you can’t predict in which direction. Depending on what year you happen to look at, Tesla is either one of the market’s biggest winners, or biggest losers.

So if you’re new to Tesla, or just want to buy more of its shares, here are some numbers to consider.

Last year, Tesla was among the biggest gainers in market value of all US companies, according to numbers that Wilshire Indexes assembled at my request. Tesla’s 2023 gain of $366 billion in stock market value was the seventh largest among US corporations.

That’s how Tesla became part of the Magnificent Seven, a term created by Michael Hartnett, a Bank of America analyst. The Seven, which also includes Apple (AAPL), Microsoft (MSFT), Amazon (AMZN), Nvidia (NVDA), Alphabet (GOOG, GOOGL), and Meta (META), accounted for more than 60% of the return posted by the S&P 500 (^GSPC) last year, even though they started the year with a combined S&P weight of only about 20%.

But in less than four weeks this year, Tesla has given back more than half its 2023 gain. Its stock performance has switched from magnificent to maleficent.

That’s primarily because of less-than-stellar financial numbers that Tesla reported in January, combined with increased competition for electric vehicles in important markets like the US and China. Not to mention some games being played by Musk, which we’ll discuss in a bit.

As of Jan. 25, Tesla was by far the biggest dollar loser so far this year, with its stock market value falling by $207.4 billion, according to Wilshire. That’s more than six times the decline posted by the No. 2 loser, Boeing, whose value has fallen by $33.3 billion — thanks largely to the door panel that blew off one of its planes during a flight earlier this month.

It’s also 7.5 times the $27.6 billion decline of the third-biggest loser, Intel, and almost 10 times the $21.6 billion decline of the fourth-biggest loser, UnitedHealth Group. The ups and downs of Tesla’s stock market value are enough to make your head spin.