Musk is testing investors’ patience

Analysts annoyed that endless Twitter controversies are potentially damaging Tesla’s global brand

Twitter controversies and contradictory messages on the sale of Tesla shares are leaving analysts exasperated with Elon Musk. Photograph: AP
Twitter controversies and contradictory messages on the sale of Tesla shares are leaving analysts exasperated with Elon Musk. Photograph: AP

Shares in electric car giant Tesla have cratered this year, losing more than half of the stock’s value. Investors always take a second look at richly-valued stocks when times get tough, so Tesla was bound to take a shellacking in a bear market. However, valuation isn’t the sole driver of Tesla’s misfortune – clearly, investors are increasingly exasperated by Elon Musk.

Tesla shares have tumbled recently following the farcical goings-on at Twitter. The “will he, won’t he” saga before Musk’s takeover was bad enough, but what’s happened since – spooking Twitter advertisers with half-baked ideas and then threatening them, rapid policy U-turns, sacking half the staff in controversial fashion, then asking some of them to come back – has been chaotic and a PR “nightmare”, as Wedbush analyst Dan Ives cautioned last week.

A long-term Tesla bull, Ives is annoyed that the endless Twitter controversies are potentially damaging Tesla’s global brand.

“Tesla is Musk”, as Ives puts it, so it’s not a positive for the company if an increasing army of people see Musk as unethical and obnoxious.

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He’s also irked that Musk offloaded almost $4 billion in Tesla stock last week. After selling $8.5 billion in Tesla stock last April, Musk said no further stock sales were planned. Another $6.9 billion stock sale followed in August; again, Musk reassured investors no more sales were coming. Now – shock, horror – Musk has broken his word again. Twitter has, as Ives notes, become a “money pit”.

For investors, Musk’s credibility is dwindling fast.

Proinsias O'Mahony

Proinsias O'Mahony

Proinsias O’Mahony, a contributor to The Irish Times, writes the weekly Stocktake column