I agree and disagree at the same time; if that's possible!Tesla can't trade like a tech stock forever. There a manufacturing company. They have to end up building stuff. If they want to double earnings they need to ship twice as many cars.
If faceplant or Twitter or whomever wants to double earnings, they need to get more users, replicate more servers, and sell more adds. Apple designs a new phone, pays Foxcon $100 to build it and sells it for 10X, and people change phones every year or so.
Making cars is hard.
It can go on for a while. They realistically have no competitor save maybe BYD. These high debt legacy OEM's can't compete in that market- they have too much debt. There operating in the old world. They need to consolidate - so we have 4 or 5 car companies not 20. It almost happened in 2008, but some folks got bailed out and ZIRP saved the rest. When that happens we will have a real market. Until then, we wait.
Tesla continues to expand and build factories. IMO, the Model 2 at Texas and Monterrey has sooooo much potential. If they can build and sell that car with a 10% to 15% GM, you are talking about taking Civic/Corolla market share with far better margins. How can Tesla do that? Of course battery cost has to be improved, but Tesla continues to improve mfg efficiency. Their cost to manufacture goes down every quarter. The new lines and plants will be the most efficient yet.
From the car BU standpoint, I think the biggest barrier is the cars are getting stale. Yes they continually improve, the the "same car" offerings will last only so long. The S3XY may be on borrowed time.
Where I disagree is Tesla is only a mfg company. Tesla is a software company; I don't know of another car company that programs its own chip firmware. This allowed for Tesla to better weather the pandemic. Will other car companies code their own or source from Tesal?
The Dojo Supercomputer is powered by the D1 chip engineered by Tesla engineers. The D1 chip, manufactured by TSMC using 7nm nodes, features 50B transistors. It packs together 354 independent processors, resulting in 362 TFLOPS of compute and 440 MB of internal static random-access memory storage.
It goes on. What does the future hold? In my experience, the future is software.
Good conversation and I appreciate your thoughts.