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Tag Archive for: (TSLA)

Mad Hedge Fund Trader

The Great Race for Battery Technology

Diary, Newsletter

One hundred years from now, historians will probably date the beginning of the fall of the American Empire to 1986. That is the year President Ronald Reagan ordered Jimmy Carter?s solar panels torn down from the White House roof, and when Chinese Premier Deng Xiaoping launched his secret ?863? program to make his country a global technology leader.

Lady LibertyIs the End Near for the US?

? The big question today is who will win one of the biggest opportunities of our generation. Some 27 years later, the evidence that China is winning this final battle is everywhere.? China dominates in windmill power, controls 97% of the world?s rare earth supplies essential for modern electronics, is plunging ahead with ?clean coal?, and boasts the world?s most ambitious nuclear power program. It is a dominant player in high-speed rail, and is making serious moves into commercial and military aviation. It is also cleaning our clock in electric cars, with more than 30 low cost, emission free models coming to the market by the end of 2013. Looking from a distance, one could conclude that China has already won the technology war. Not if Tesla?s (TSLA) Elon Musk has anything to say about it. Our only serious entrant in this life or death competition is the Tesla Model S-1, which has been on the market now for a year.? At $80,000 per vehicle for the long range version that accounts for 90% of sales, production is now ramping up to a modest 40,000 units a year. My Model X SUV won?t be delivered until January 2015. Elon tells me that he plans to bring out a $40,000, 300-mile range ?Next Gen? vehicle by 2018, which will reach 500,000 in annual production. And they will all be 100% ?Made in the USA.? TSLA 11-5-13

JT with TeslaAnd the Winner Is?

? General Motors? (GM) pitiful entrant in this sweepstakes, the Chevy Volt, has utterly failed to reach the firm?s sales targets. It is, in fact, a hybrid that runs on battery power for the first 40 miles, when a weak conventional gasoline engine takes over to deal with ?range anxiety.? Still, I receive constant emails from drivers who say they absolutely love the cars, with many still driving around on the original year old tank of gas. And at $39,000, with dealer discounts and tax subsidies, it IS cheap. This is all far more than a race to bring commercial products to the marketplace. At stake is nothing less than the viability of our two economic systems. By setting national goals, providing unlimited funding, focusing scarce resources, and letting engineers run it all, China can orchestrate assaults on technical barriers and markets that planners here can only dream about. And let?s face it, economies of scale are possible in the Middle Kingdom that would be unimaginable in America.

Nissan LeafNissan Leaf

The laissez faire, libertarian approach now in vogue in the US creates a lot of noise, but little progress. The Dotcom bust dried up substantial research and development funding for technology for a decade. A ban on government funding of stem cell research, for religious reasons, left us seriously behind in that crucial field. An administration that believed that global warming was a leftist hoax, coddled big oil, and put alternative energy development on a back burner. While China was ramping up clean coal research, President Bush was closing down ours. Never mind that the people supplying us with 2 million barrels of crude a day from the Middle East are trying to kill us through whatever means possible, and are using our money to do it. But Americans are finally figuring out that we can?t raise our standard of living selling subprime loans to each other, and that a new direction is needed.

Toyota PriusToyota Plug-In Prius

Mention government involvement in anything these days and you get a sour, skeptical look. But this ignores the indisputable verdict of history. Most of the great leaps forward in US economic history were the product of massive government involvement. I?m thinking of the transcontinental railroad, the Panama Canal, Hoover Dam, the atomic bomb, and the interstate highway system. All of these were far too big for a private company ever to consider. If the government had not funneled billions in today?s dollars into early computer research, your laptop today would run on vacuum tubes, be as big as a skyscraper, and cost $100 million.

Mainframe - OldCheck Out My New Laptop

I mention all of this not because I have a fascination with obscure automotive technologies or inorganic chemistry (even though I do). Long time readers of this letter have already made some serious money in the battery space. This is not pie in the sky stuff; this is where money is being made now. I caught a 500% gain by hanging on to Warren Buffet?s coat tails with an investment in the Middle Kingdom?s Build Your Dreams (BYDDF) four years ago. I followed with a 250% profit in Chile?s Sociedad Qimica Y Minera (SQM), the world?s largest lithium producer. Tesla?s own shares have been the top performer in the US market in 2014, up over 400%. These are not small numbers. I have been an advocate and an enabler of this technology for 40 years, and my obsession has only recently started to pay off big time. We?re not talking about a few niche products here. The research boutique, HIS Insights, predicts that electric cars will take over 15% of the global car market, or 7.5 million units by 2020. Even with costs falling, that means the market will then be worth $225 billion. Electric cars and their multitude of spin off technologies will become a dominant investment theme for the rest of our lives. Think of the auto industry in the 1920?s. (TSLA), (BYDDF), and (SQM) are just the appetizers. BYDFF 11-5-13 All of this effort is being expended to bring battery technology out of the 19th century and into the 21st. The first crude electrical cell was invented by Italian Alessandro Volta in 1759, and Benjamin Franklin came up with
the term ?battery? after his experiments with brass keys and lightning. In 1859, Gaston Plant? discovered the formula that powers the Energizer bunny today.

Energizer BunnyI Don?t Look 154 Years Old, Do I?

Further progress was not made until none other than Exxon developed the first lithium-ion battery in 1977. Then, oil prices crashed, and the company scrapped the program, a strategy misstep that was to become a familiar refrain. Sony (SNE) took over the lead with nickel metal hydride technology, and owns the industry today, along with Chinese and South Korean competitors.

BYD F3BYD F3

We wait in gas lines to ?fill ?er up? for a reason. Gasoline has been the most efficient, concentrated, and easily distributed source of energy for more than a century. Expect to hear a lot about the number 1,600 in coming years. That is the amount of electrical energy in a liter (0.26 gallons), or kilogram of gasoline expressed in kilowatt-hours. A one-kilogram lithium-ion battery using today?s most advanced designs produces 200 KwH. Stretching the envelope, scientists might get that to 400 KwH in the near future. But any freshman physics student can tell you that since electrical motors are four times more efficient than internal combustion ones, that is effective parity with gasoline. Since no one has done any serious research on inorganic chemistry since the Manhattan project, until Elon Musk came along, the prospects for rapid advances are good. A good rule of thumb is that costs will drop by half every four years. So Tesla S-1 battery that costs $30,000 today will run $15,000 in 2017 and only $7,500 in 2021. Per Kilowatt battery costs are dropping like a stone, from $1,000 a kWh in the Nissan Leaf I bought three years ago to $365. kWh in my new Tesla S-1. In fact, the Tesla, is such a revolutionary product that the battery is only the eighth most important thing. The additional savings that no one talks about is that an electric motor with only eleven moving parts requires no tune-ups for the life of the vehicle. This compares to over 1,000 parts for a standard gas engine. You only rotate tires every 6,000 miles. That?s because the motor runs at room temperature, compared to 500 degrees for a conventional engine, so the parts last forever. Visit the Tesla factory, and you are struck by the fact that there are almost no people, just an army of German robots. Few parts mean fewer workers, and lower costs. All of the parts are made at the Fremont, CA plant, eliminating logistical headaches, and more cost. By only selling the vehicle online, the expense of a huge dealer network is dispatched. The US government rates the S-1 as the safest car every built, a fact that I personally tested with my own crash. Consumer Reports argues that it is the highest quality vehicle every manufactured.

Tesla  DamageMy Personal Crash Test

Indeed, the Tesla S-1 is already the most registered car in America?s highest earning zip codes. Oh, and did I tell you that the car is totally cool? SQM 11-5-13 Hence the need for government subsidies to get private industry over the cost/production hump. Nissan, Toyota, Tesla, and others are all betting their companies that further progress and economies of scale will drive that cost down to below $100 per kWh. That will make electric cars cheaper than conventional hydrocarbon powered ones by a large margin. The global conversion to electric happens much faster than anyone thinks. In a desperate attempt to play catch up, President Obama has lavished money on alternative energy, virtually, since the day he arrived in office. His original stimulus package included $167 billion for the industry, enough to move hundreds of projects out of college labs and into production. However, in the ultimate irony, much of this money is going to foreign companies, since it is they who are closest to bringing commercially viable products to market. Look no further than South Korea?s LG, which received $160 million to build batteries for the Volt. The IRS currently gives buyers of electric cars a $7,500 tax credit on their federal return. California buyers get an additional check for $2,500, and get zero emissions commuter stickers which permit single drivers in HOV lanes. Fortunately the US with its massively broad and deep basic research infrastructure, a large military research establishment (remember the old DARPA Net?), and dozens of still top rate universities, is in the best position to discover a breakthrough technology. The Energy Department has financed the greatest burst in inorganic chemistry research in history, with top rate scientists pouring out of leading defense labs at Los Alamos, Lawrence Livermore, and Argonne National Labs. There are newly funded teams around the country exploring opportunities in zinc-bromide, magnesium, and lithium sulfur batteries. A lot of excitement has been generated by lithium-air technology, as well as much controversy. In the end, it may come down to whether our Chinese professors are smarter than their Chinese professors.? In 2007, the People?s Republic took the unprecedented step of appointing Dr. Wan Gang as its Minister of Science and Technology, a brilliant Shanghai engineer and university president, without the benefit of membership in the communist party. Battery development has been named a top national priority in China. It is all reminiscent of the 1960?s missile race, when a huge NASA organization led by Dr. Wernher von Braun beat the Russians to the moon, proving our Germans were better than their Germans.

Wernher von Braun - RocketAnything for a Green Card

Consumers were the ultimate winners of that face off as the profusion of technologies the space program fathered pushed standards of living up everywhere. I bet that?s how this contest ends as well. The only question is whether the operating instructions will come in English?or Mandarin.

Mandarin WritingIt?s Easy, Just Read the Manual

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/Energizer-Bunny.jpg 347 290 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2013-11-06 01:03:352013-11-06 01:03:35The Great Race for Battery Technology
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

A Note on the Tesla Fire

Diary, Newsletter

You can? keep a good stock down. That?s the obvious message on Tesla (TLSA) shares in the wake of the fire that consumed one of its $80,000 Model?s S-1?s on a Washington state road after it ran over the rear bumper of the truck it was following. The video was quickly plastered all over YouTube (click here to view).

This was the first S-1 to catch fire since the production run started two years ago. That compares to the roughly 400 gasoline powered vehicles that catch fire on US roads nearly every day. If you really want to see how volatile gasoline is, try lighting a campfire with it some day. Even tossing lit matches in from a great distance, as I once did, you?ll be lucky to have your eyebrows left. I didn?t.

Tesla followed up quickly with an analysis and a letter with a complete explanation sent to all other S-1 drivers signed by none other than CEO Elon Musk. I have included the entire text below in italics.

What happened to the hapless driver of the burning S-1? He is eagerly awaiting delivery of another S-1 from the Fremont, California factory. It seems, he loves the car, and can?t wait to get back into one.

?Earlier this week, a Model?S traveling at highway speed struck a large metal object, causing significant damage to the vehicle. A curved section that fell off a semi-trailer was recovered from the roadway near where the accident occurred and, according to the road crew that was on the scene, appears to be the culprit. The geometry of the object caused a powerful lever action as it went under the car, punching upward and impaling the Model?S with a peak force on the order of 25 tons. Only a force of this magnitude would be strong enough to punch a 3 inch diameter hole through the quarter inch armor plate protecting the base of the vehicle.

The Model?S owner was nonetheless able to exit the highway as instructed by the onboard alert system, bring the car to a stop and depart the vehicle without injury. A fire caused by the impact began in the front battery module ? the battery pack has a total of 16 modules ? but was contained to the front section of the car by internal firewalls within the pack. Vents built into the battery pack directed the flames down towards the road and away from the vehicle.

When the fire department arrived, they observed standard procedure, which was to gain access to the source of the fire by puncturing holes in the top of the battery's protective metal plate and applying water. For the Model?S lithium-ion battery, it was correct to apply water (vs. dry chemical extinguisher), but not to puncture the metal firewall, as the newly created holes allowed the flames to then vent upwards into the front trunk section of the Model?S. Nonetheless, a combination of water followed by dry chemical extinguisher quickly brought the fire to an end.

It is important to note that the fire in the battery was contained to a small section near the front by the internal firewalls built into the pack structure. At no point did fire enter the passenger compartment.

Had a conventional gasoline car encountered the same object on the highway, the result could have been far worse. A typical gasoline car only has a thin metal sheet protecting the underbody, leaving it vulnerable to destruction of the fuel supply lines or fuel tank, which causes a pool of gasoline to form and often burn the entire car to the ground. In contrast, the combustion energy of our battery pack is only about 10% of the energy contained in a gasoline tank and is divided into 16 modules with firewalls in between. As a consequence, the effective combustion potential is only about 1% that of the fuel in a comparable gasoline sedan.

The nationwide driving statistics make this very clear: there are 150,000 car fires per year according to the National Fire Protection Association, and Americans drive about 3 trillion miles per year according to the Department of Transportation. That equates to 1 vehicle fire for every 20 million miles driven, compared to 1 fire in over 100 million miles for Tesla. This means you are 5 times more likely to experience a fire in a conventional gasoline car than a Tesla!

For consumers concerned about fire risk, there should be absolutely zero doubt that it is safer to power a car with a battery than a large tank of highly flammable liquid.?

?

Elon Musk
CEO,
Tesla Motors

 

TSLA 10-9-13

JT with TeslaS-1 Driver, Eyebrows Intact

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/JT-with-Tesla-e1427723768460.jpg 227 400 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2013-10-10 08:52:372013-10-10 08:52:37A Note on the Tesla Fire
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

On That Tesla Recommendation

Diary, Newsletter

Will the person who bought Tesla shares (TSLA) on my recommendation last year at $30 please email me? I was traveling in Europe over the summer and lost your email address. I would like to get a testimonial from you. The stock hit $173.70 today, and is up 580% from your cost, making it the top performing US stock this year.

With the money you?ve made you can probably buy a Tesla now. I recommend the high performance Model S-1 with the upgraded sound system and the 270-mile range. I have one, and they are to die for. It?s the only car I ever bought where the specifications keep improving every month with each automatic software update. Or you can wait until next year and by the four-wheel drive SUV Model X. I am on the waiting list for that one.

You owe me.

TSLA 9-3-13

JT with Tesla

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/JT-with-Tesla-e1427723768460.jpg 227 400 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2013-09-04 01:03:492013-09-04 01:03:49On That Tesla Recommendation
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

Get Ready for the Next Golden Age

Diary, Newsletter

I believe that the global economy is setting up for a new golden age reminiscent of the one the United States enjoyed during the 1950?s, and which I still remember fondly. This is not some pie in the sky prediction. It simply assumes a continuation of existing trends in demographics, technology, politics, and economics. The implications for your investment portfolio will be huge.

What I call ?intergenerational arbitrage? will be the principal impetus. The main reason that we are now enduring two ?lost decades? is that 80 million baby boomers are retiring to be followed by only 65 million ?Gen Xer?s?. When the majority of the population is in retirement mode, it means that there are fewer buyers of real estate, home appliances, and ?RISK ON? assets like equities, and more buyers of assisted living facilities, health care, and ?RISK OFF? assets like bonds.

The net result of this is slower economic growth, higher budget deficits, a weak currency, and registered investment advisors who have distilled their practices down to only municipal bond sales.

Fast forward ten years when the reverse happens and the baby boomers are out of the economy, worried about whether their diapers get changed on time or if their favorite flavor of Ensure is in stock at the nursing home. That is when you have 65 million Gen Xer?s being chased by 85 million of the ?millennial? generation trying to buy their assets.

By then we will not have built new homes in appreciable numbers for 20 years and a severe scarcity of housing hits. Residential real estate prices will soar. Labor shortages will force wage hikes. The middle class standard of living will reverse a then 40-year decline. Annual GDP growth will return from the current subdued 2% rate to near the torrid 4% seen during the 1990?s.

The stock market rockets in this scenario. Share prices may rise very gradually for the rest of the teens as long as tepid 2% growth persists. A 5% annual gain takes the Dow to 20,000 by 2020. After that, we could see the same fourfold return we saw during the Clinton administration, taking the Dow to 80,000 by 2030. Emerging stock markets (EEM) with much higher growth rates do far better.

This is not just a demographic story. The next 20 years should bring a fundamental restructuring of our energy infrastructure as well. The 100-year supply of natural gas (UNG) we have recently discovered through the new ?fracking? technology will finally make it to end users, replacing coal (KOL) and oil (USO). Fracking applied to oilfields is also unlocking vast new supplies.

Since 1995, the US Geological Survey estimate of recoverable reserves has ballooned from 150 million barrels to 8 billion. OPEC?s share of global reserves is collapsing. This is all happening while automobile efficiencies are rapidly improving and the use of public transportation soars.? Mileage for the average US car has jumped from 23 to 24.7 miles per gallon in the last couple of years. Total gasoline consumption is now at a five year low.

OPEC Share of World Crude Oil Reserves 2010

Alternative energy technologies will also contribute in an important way in states like California, accounting for 30% of total electric power generation. I now have an all-electric garage, with a Nissan Leaf (NSANY) for local errands and a Tesla Model S-1 (TSLA) for longer trips, allowing me to disappear from the gasoline market completely. Millions will follow. The net result of all of this is lower energy prices for everyone.

It will also flip the US from a net importer to an exporter of energy, with hugely positive implications for America?s balance of payments. Eliminating our largest import and adding an important export is very dollar bullish for the long term. That sets up a multiyear short for the world?s big energy consuming currencies, especially the Japanese yen (FXY) and the Euro (FXE). A strong greenback further reinforces the bull case for stocks.

Accelerating technology will bring another continuing positive. Of course, it?s great to have new toys to play with on the weekends, send out Facebook photos to the family, and edit your own home videos. But at the enterprise level this is enabling speedy improvements in productivity that is filtering down to every business in the US, lower costs everywhere.

This is why corporate earnings have been outperforming the economy as a whole by a large margin. Profit margins are at an all time high. Living near booming Silicon Valley, I can tell you that there are thousands of new technologies and business models that you have never heard of under development. When the winners emerge they will have a big cross-leveraged effect on economy.

New health care breakthroughs will make serious disease a thing of the past, which are also being spearheaded in the San Francisco Bay area. This is because the Golden State thumbed its nose at the federal government ten years ago when the stem cell research ban was implemented. It raised $3 billion through a bond issue to fund its own research, even though it couldn?t afford it.

I tell my kids they will never be afflicted by my maladies. When they get cancer in 40 years they will just go down to Wal-Mart and buy a bottle of cancer pills for $5, and it will be gone by Friday. What is this worth to the global economy? Oh, about $2 trillion a year, or 4% of GDP. Who is overwhelmingly in the driver?s seat on these innovations? The USA.

There is a political element to the new Golden Age as well. Gridlock in Washington can?t last forever. Eventually, one side or another will prevail with a clear majority. Conservatives may grind their teeth, but if Hillary Clinton wins in 2016, the Democrats will control the White House until 2025. Right now, she is leading by a 60% margin with Republican women.

This will allow the government to push through needed long-term structural reforms, the solution of which everyone agrees on now, but nobody wants to be blamed for. That means raising the retirement age from 66 to 70 where it belongs, and means-testing recipients. Billionaires don?t need the $30,156 annual supplement. Nor do I.

The ending of our foreign wars and the elimination of extravagant unneeded weapons systems cuts defense spending from $800 billion a year to $400 billion, or back to the 2000, pre-9/11 level. Guess what happens when we cut defense spending? So does everyone else.

I can tell you from personal experience that staying friendly with someone is far cheaper than blowing them up. A Pax Americana would ensue. That means China will have to defend its own oil supply, instead of relying on us to do it for them. That?s why they have recently bought a second used aircraft carrier.

Medicare also needs to be reformed. How is it that the world?s most efficient economy has the least efficient health care system, with the worst outcomes? This is going to be a decade long workout and I can?t guess how it will end. Raise the growth rate and trim back the government?s participation in the credit markets, and you make the numerous miracles above more likely.

The national debt comes under control, and we don?t end up like Greece. The long awaited Treasury bond (TLT) crash never happens. Ben Bernanke has already told us as much by indicating that the Federal Reserve may never unwind its massive $3.5 trillion in bond holdings.

Sure, this is all very long-term, over the horizon stuff. You can expect the financial markets to start discounting a few years hence, even though the main drivers won?t kick in for another decade. But some individual industries and companies will start to discount this rosy scenario now. Perhaps this is what the nonstop rally in stocks since November has been trying to tell us.

Dow Average 1970-2012 Dow Average 1970-2012

US Profit Margin 1929 - Q2 2012

'57 T-Bird Another American Golden Age is Coming

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/57-T-Bird.jpg 237 305 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2013-08-30 09:28:162013-08-30 09:28:16Get Ready for the Next Golden Age
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

Another Miracle from Tesla

Diary, Newsletter

Tesla has announced a new battery swapping service that will enable drivers to get a full charge for their all-electric Model S-1 sedans in 90 seconds. The service will be available at strategically located charging stations around the country, and will cost $60, about the cost of an equivalent full tank of gas.

The swap is fully automated. You just drive over a machine and it is all done for you. No crawling under the car on your back is required.

There, owners will have the option of getting a fast charge for free in 45 minutes, or the instant battery swap. Given that the 270-mile range of the car is greater than the range of by bladder, I?ll probably be opting for the former.

The move offers some very interesting long-term implications. It certainly means that Tesla is not worried about the life of its 1,000-pound lithium ion batteries, which cost about $32,000 per vehicle to produce. If the range starts to fade, you just take it in for a swap.

In any case, the company?s mercurial founder and Iron Man model, Elon Musk, has other plans for old, depleted batteries. For a start, they can be used as backup storage devices for solar powered homes wired by his other firm, Solar City (SCTY), a top performing stock of 2013.

In the meantime, Tesla?s shares are impossibly maintaining a stratospheric price of over $100, valuing the company at $11 billion, and making it the number one performing American stock this year. This is despite announcing its first recall for a minor weld holding down the rear seat.

I tell my kids that I rode a time machine ten years into the future, bought the Tesla, and brought it back home to drive them. Ever the wise aleck, my oldest son asked why I didn?t obtain something more valuable, like a sports statistics magazine showing who will win the next ten Super Bowls. Now, that would be useful!

For a video of Elon demonstration the battery swap process last week and a fabulous piece of marketing, please click here. No wonder people are going gaga over this company!

TSLA 6-25-13

SCTY 6-25-13

John Thomas

Tesla

0 0 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2013-06-26 01:03:272013-06-26 01:03:27Another Miracle from Tesla
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

Tesla Takes Off the Gloves

Diary, Newsletter

Tesla (TSLA) CEO, Elon Musk, has taken off the gloves and is offering an innovative new hybrid lease that promises to bring in thousands of new buyers of his revolutionary, all electric S-1 sedan.

The package eliminates the downside risk that concerned prospective customers about the resale value of their cars down the road. Under the program, Tesla will buy back your car at 50% of the purchase price after 36-39 months. This equates to a rate of depreciation that is on par with other premium, high-end vehicles, like Mercedes, Porsche, and Jaguar.

Assuming that you buy the 85 kWh, 270 miles range S-1 for $79,900, this works out to a monthly payment of $1,025, also in line with the market. Tesla people tell me that since the plan was announced, 90% of the buyers have opted for the lease option. Many are actual cash buyers who are placing the maximum $50,000 down with the intention to pay off the $30,000 balance in six months, just to get the free put option on the vehicle.

Tesla is also moving full steam ahead with its national supercharger network, which will enable electric car owners to drive coast to coast. Only 45 minutes is required to obtain a full charge. Just last night, my S-1 upgraded itself online and I was presented with new superchargers in Gilroy and Bakersfield, California. I can now make it down to San Diego.

Elon has promised to take his family on such an expedition as soon as the infrastructure is in place some time next year. I am considering my own trip from San Francisco to Chicago, which according to MapQuest, I could do in 30 hours. After all, it will be free, less the investment of my own time at the wheel, and the wear and tear on the tires.

When I was a teenager during the 1960?s, I hitchhiked from the West to the East coast more than 30 times. I used to race my younger brother from Los Angeles to New York, who finally won with a record time of 49 hours. I met a lot of strange people in those days. Once, I was picked up in Texas by a nervous, chain-smoking woman driving a souped up Dodge Dart fleeing a violent husband, seeking refuge in California. She drove like a bat out of hell the entire way, and we made the Golden State in record time. It?s funny, the things you remember.

A drive across the Great American Desert can have a cleansing, almost rejuvenating effect, as long as you don?t mind the country western music on the radio. The last time I did this was during the eighties, when I drove my ?sister to graduate school at Texas A&M. That little foray found me line dancing with a bunch of drunken Aggies in a College Station bar. How is it that everything surreal that happens to me always occurs in Texas?

But I digress. Tesla has quit making the 40 kWh, 130-mile range version of the S-1, as virtually all demand was for the long range model. The waiting list is now down to two months, which is why they took the next step on the marketing front. The four-wheel drive Model X is still on schedule for 2014, and I am number 645 on the waiting list for that vehicle. I have already wired my Lake Take house for 220 volt recharging. Who cares what the price is!

When I stop at traffic lights in the city, I still get applause and thumbs up from cheering groups of pedestrians. And then there are those little notes tucked under the windshield wipers from admiring young women asking for rides. That, alone, is worth the $100k. The State of California has already sent me my $2,500 Clean Vehicle Rebate, and I plan to claim my $7,500 Qualified Plug-in Electric Drive Motor Vehicle Credit (form 8936) on my federal tax return this year.

I have received a lot of emails about the weekend Barron?s article panning Tesla. Elon says he can drop the cost of his batteries from $400 to $200 in five years, making his planned mass market $40,000, 200 mile range ?Gen III? Tesla profitable. General Motors (GM) says he can?t. Given the recent track record of the two companies, I am more inclined to back Elon.

Let me tell you what is really going on here. The automobile establishment absolutely hates Tesla, because Musk has proven everything they said was impossible. Tesla doesn?t advertise, as its innovative, low cost business model sells all of its cars online. This is why they are banned in Texas, which hasn?t the slightest interest in seeing non-oil forms of transportation succeed.

Tesla also doesn?t advertise. Open the pages of Barron?s, and you will find ads extolling the virtues of General Motors, Ford, (F), and Chrysler, but not one from the disruptive Tesla. It?s the same with the financial industry. Barron?s often publishes damning expos?s on tiny companies you have never heard of, but extolls the great wisdom and foresight of PIMCO, Fidelity, and Morgan Stanley, their largest advertisers. That is the free market, capitalist world we live in.

Tesla Gen III Tesla

JT with Tesla

Tesla

Tesla Fuel Economy Made in America

https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/Tesla.jpg 271 483 Mad Hedge Fund Trader https://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.png Mad Hedge Fund Trader2013-06-12 15:10:392013-06-12 15:10:39Tesla Takes Off the Gloves
Mad Hedge Fund Trader

On the Tesla Melt Up

Diary, Newsletter

This was the short squeeze that was begging to happen. Five guys owned 50% of the company, including the visionary founder, Elon Musk. Of the remaining float, 45% had been borrowed and sold short by hedge funds. All that was needed to ignite a rally was for someone to say ?Boo.?

That is exactly what Ben Bernanke has done with his non stop quantitative easing. A poorly researched hatchet job by the New York Times on the new all electric Tesla Model S-1 produced a flood of countervailing positive reviews extolling the many virtues of the revolutionary vehicle (click here for ?My Take on the Tesla Tiff?). The Times could not have delivered a more effective marketing campaign if you paid them millions.

Then the company announced its first profit in history. It sold 4,900 cars, versus an expected 4,500, one of which was to me. Some 70% were of the highest margin, 80 kWh, $80,000, 300-mile range version. This was on the heels of its first ever price increase. The Q1, 2013 net jumped to $11.9 million compared to an $89.9 million loss in the earlier quarter. It boosted its forecast of this year?s total production from 20,000 to 21,000 vehicles.

There is now a one-year waiting list for the least expensive $60,000 model. Cash is pouring in so fast that Tesla announced it would pay back its $465 million Department of Energy loan five years early. It is also talking to Google about adopting its driverless technology.

South African native, Elon Musk, is said to be the model on which the Iron Man character, Tony Stark, is based. His IPO late last year for SolarCity (SCTY) has also delivered a gangbusters performance, up 216%. Next on the calendar is taking Space X public, his heavy lift rocket company with a NASA contract potentially worth $1 billion. Since January, his personal fortune has tripled to $7 billion. This is truly the man with the golden touch.

The onslaught of good news triggered one of the sharpest and most furious short squeezes in stock market history. (TSLA) is now one of the top performing shares in the world this year, up a staggering 194%. Elon did get some outside help. Squeezing the largest short open interest stocks has been one of the most profitable trading strategies of 2013. Tesla is simply following on the heels of Blackberry (BBRY), Herbalife (HLF), and Netflix (NFLX), with similar results.

There is a cautionary tale in the Tesla action. Many of the players on the short side were global warming deniers who believed the whole thing was a leftist hoax. They thought Tesla, and all the other ?green? plays, like First Solar (FSLR), were the artificial creations of government subsidy that were all going to zero once the free money was withdrawn.

After I toured the Tesla factory and saw that he car was real, I warned some of these guys they were out of their mind. Whenever one filters investment decisions through a political prism, whatever that prism is, you might as well pile up your money and set fire to it.

At $97 a share, with a market capitalization of $12 billion, Tesla is now one of the world?s largest car companies, beating out Fiat (FIATY), which owns Chrysler and Peugeot (PEUGY). This is for a company that has only made 10,000 cars! Tesla now boasts a price earnings multiple of 70X, compared to 9.6X for Ford Motors (F).

What Tesla should do here is file for a secondary share offering and use the cash raised to retire debt. They can also sue the state of Texas, which has banned sales of the cars. They are trying to force the company to sell through a local, good ol? boy dealer network. Tesla only sells its cars online, another ground breaking and cost cutting aspect of their business model. So much for deregulation in the Lone Star State. I guess they are trying to keep us hooked on Texas Tea.

Even at the January price of $33, Tesla was expensive when compared to its peers. The investors were clearly taking a longer-term view. The demand for $60,000-$110,000 cars is limited. Next year it broadens out to the Model X, and all electric SUV, which should cost about the same.

Most on Wall Street have completely missed the main point of the whole Tesla story. The real play here is for a low end mass market vehicle, which Tesla will bring out in 4-5 years, using the manufacturing expertise and technology they developed with the earlier Roadster and the S-1.

Keep in mind that electric car battery ranges are doubling about every three years. Look no further than my own garage, where I jumped from an 80 mile range Nissan Leaf to the Tesla S-1 in just two years. I just sold my starter electric car to an ecstatic PhD in biochemistry at UC Berkeley for a bargain $18,500.

That means that by 2018, you will be able to buy a 300-mile range, five passenger Tesla hatchback for about $40,000. This will enable the company to grow into a major worldwide industry presence. That?s when the ?Big Three? becomes the ?Big Four?. That?s what a $97 share price is screaming at you.

Let me explain what else is in the works. By next year, there will be 20,000 Tesla?s in the San Francisco Bay Area. Our local utility, PG&E (PGE), currently sells us power for electric cars for 5 cents a kWh between midnight and 7:00 AM. By sometime in 2014, if you leave your car plugged in, it will then buy it back from you during the day at 40 cents a kWh!

With the backup supply of 20,000 1,000-pound Tesla lithium ion batteries, (PGE) might be able to take a few natural gas power plants offline (the last coal fired plant in California was closed about 10 years ago). Not only will the power for your car be free, your utility will pay you to drive it! The system is already undergoing beta testing at a utility in Delaware. Welcome to the future!

Last weekend, I drove to the local shopping mall to run some errands. There was a classic car show on, so there was no spare parking. I asked the show organizers if they were accepting late entries, just to get a parking space.

Both the fans and the other exhibitors were drawn to my S-1 like a magnet, mobbing the car and barraging me with questions. Some thought it was a joke, as there was no visible motor. I felt like Marty McFly bringing a car from Back to the Future. I popped out to run my errands. When I returned, I had won first prize and a blue ribbon.

There is one battery problem that I should write about here. Since the end of the ski season, my Toyota Highlander Hybrid has sat neglected in my driveway, accumulating pine needles and bird poop. Since I?m not driving it enough to recharge the conventional lead acid battery, it keeps going dead. The Auto Club has already been out to give me a jump-start three times, and they say next time, they are going to bill me.

I have written at length about Tesla since the inception of this letter five years ago. To read another recent piece with more details on the engineering and the specs, please click here. Expect to hear a lot more.

TSLA 5-14-13

SCTY 5-14-13

Cars-Classic The Competition

JT with Tesla First Prize for a Late Entry

Tesla I Could Have Sworn I Left the Engine There Yesterday

Electric Cars In Your Future

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

Get Ready for the Next Golden Age

Diary, Newsletter

I believe that the global economy is setting up for a new golden age reminiscent of the one the United States enjoyed during the 1950?s, and which I still remember fondly. This is not some pie in the sky prediction. It simply assumes a continuation of existing trends in demographics, technology, politics, and economics. The implications for your investment portfolio will be huge.

What I call ?intergenerational arbitrage? will be the principal impetus. The main reason that we are now enduring two ?lost decades? is that 80 million baby boomers are retiring to be followed by only 65 million ?Gen Xer?s?. When the majority of the population is in retirement mode, it means that there are fewer buyers of real estate, home appliances, and ?RISK ON? assets like equities, and more buyers of assisted living facilities, health care, and ?RISK OFF? assets like bonds. The net result of this is slower economic growth, higher budget deficits, a weak currency, and registered investment advisors who have distilled their practices down to only municipal bond sales.

Fast forward ten years when the reverse happens and the baby boomers are out of the economy, worried about whether their diapers get changed on time or if their favorite flavor of Ensure is in stock at the nursing home. That is when you have 65 million Gen Xer?s being chased by 85 million of the ?millennial? generation trying to buy their assets.

By then we will not have built new homes in appreciable numbers for 20 years and a severe scarcity of housing hits. Residential real estate prices will soar. Labor shortages will force wage hikes. The middle class standard of living will reverse a then 40-year decline. Annual GDP growth will return from the current subdued 2% rate to near the torrid 4% seen during the 1990?s.

The stock market rockets in this scenario. Share prices may rise gradually for the rest of the teens as long as growth stagnates. A 5% annual gain takes the Dow to 20,000 by 2020. After that, we could see the same fourfold return we saw during the Clinton administration, taking the Dow to 80,000 by 2030. Emerging stock markets (EEM) with much higher growth rates do far better.

This is not just a demographic story. The next 20 years should bring a fundamental restructuring of our energy infrastructure as well. The 100-year supply of natural gas (UNG) we have recently discovered through the new ?fracking? technology will finally make it to end users, replacing coal (KOL) and oil (USO). Fracking applied to oilfields is also unlocking vast new supplies. That?s why oil is now $70 a barrel in North Dakota versus $95 in Oklahoma 1,000 miles to the South.

Since 1995, the US Geological Survey estimate of recoverable reserves has ballooned from 150 million barrels to 8 billion. OPEC?s share of global reserves is collapsing. This is all happening while automobile efficiencies are rapidly improving and the use of public transportation soars.? Mileage for the average US car has jumped from 23 to 24.7 miles per gallon in the last couple of years. Total gasoline consumption is now at a five year low.

OPEC Share of World Crude Oil Reserves 2010

Alternative energy technologies will also contribute in an important way in states like California, accounting for 30% of total electric power generation. I now have an all electric garage, with a Nissan Leaf (NSANY) for local errands and a Tesla S-1 (TSLA) for longer trips, allowing me to disappear from the gasoline market completely. Millions will follow. The net result of all of this is lower energy prices for everyone.

It will also flip the US from a net importer to an exporter of energy, with hugely positive implications for America?s balance of payments. Eliminating our largest import and adding an important export is very dollar bullish for the long term. That sets up a multiyear short for the world?s big energy consuming currencies, especially the Japanese yen (FXY) and the Euro (FXE). A strong greenback further reinforces the bull case for stocks.

Accelerating technology will bring another continuing positive. Of course, it?s great to have new toys to play with on the weekends, send out Facebook photos to the family, and edit your own home videos. But at the enterprise level this is enabling speedy improvements in productivity that is filtering down to every business in the US.

This is why corporate earnings have been outperforming the economy as a whole by a large margin. Profit margins are at an all time high. Living near booming Silicon Valley, I can tell you that there are thousands of new technologies and business models that you have never heard of under development. When the winners emerge they will have a big cross-leveraged effect on economy.

New health care breakthroughs will make serious disease a thing of the past, which are also being spearheaded in the San Francisco Bay area. This is because the Golden State thumbed its nose at the federal government ten years ago when the stem cell research ban was implemented. It raised $3 billion through a bond issue to fund its own research, even though it couldn?t afford it.

I tell my kids they will never be afflicted by my maladies. When they get cancer in 40 years they will just go down to Wal-Mart and buy a bottle of cancer pills for $5, and it will be gone by Friday. What is this worth to the global economy? Oh, about $2 trillion a year, or 4% of GDP. Who is overwhelmingly in the driver?s seat on these innovations? The USA.

There is a political element to the new Golden Age as well. Gridlock in Washington can?t last forever. Eventually, one side or another will prevail with a clear majority. This will allow them to push through needed long-term structural reforms, the solution of which everyone agrees on now, but nobody wants to be blamed for. That means raising the retirement age from 66 to 70 where it belongs, and means-testing recipients. Billionaires don?t need the $30,156 annual supplement. Nor do I.

The ending of our foreign wars and the elimination of extravagant unneeded weapons systems cuts defense spending from $800 billion a year to $400 billion, or back to the 2000, pre-9/11 level. Guess what happens when we cut defense spending? So does everyone else.

I can tell you from personal experience that staying friendly with someone is far cheaper than blowing them up. A Pax Americana would ensue. That means China will have to defend its own oil supply, instead of relying on us to do it for them. That?s why they?re in the market for a second used aircraft carrier.

Medicare also needs to be reformed. How is it that the world?s most efficient economy has the least efficient health care system? This is going to be a decade long workout and I can?t guess how it will end. Raise the growth rate and trim back the government?s participation in the credit markets, and you make the numerous miracles above more likely.

The national debt comes under control, and we don?t end up like Greece. The long awaited Treasury bond (TLT) crash never happens. Ben Bernanke has already told us as much by indicating that the Federal Reserve may never unwind its massive $3.5 trillion in bond holdings.

Sure, this is all very long-term, over the horizon stuff. You can expect the financial markets to start discounting a few years hence, even though the main drivers won?t kick in for another decade. But some individual industries and companies will start to discount this rosy scenario now. Perhaps this is what the nonstop rally in stocks since November has been trying to tell us.

Dow Average 1970-2012

Dow Average 1970-2012

US Profit Margin 1929 - Q2 2012

'57 T-Bird

Is Another American Golden Age Coming?

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Mad Hedge Fund Trader

Follow Up on Tesla

Newsletter

Damn! I should have cut a commission deal with Tesla (TSLA) before I published my story on their amazing electric vehicle a few days ago (click here for ?My Take on the Tesla Tiff?). I have since received a dozen emails from readers telling me they have jumped on the waiting list with a $5,000 deposit, which I understand has been shortened to five months.

In the meantime, the company?s mercurial CEO, the South African programming genius, Elon Musk, has announced the firm?s Q4, 2012 earnings. The loss came in larger than expected at 65 cents a share, versus an expected 53 cents. But revenues jumped from a projected $298 million to $306 million. Musk is confident that Q1, 2013 will be profitable, as will the full 2013-year, and that a 25% profit margin will be realized.

Much of the loss was due to massive overtime wages for workers, with many clocking 70-hour weeks as they struggle to meet overwhelming demand. There are still 6,000 on the waiting list for the new Model S sedan. Musk says that the company is on target to manufacture 20,000 vehicles this year. Most of the orders have been for the high end, 85kWh, 300 mile range vehicle that starts at $72,400.

I have been deluged with questions from readers about the car?s performance. Here are the answers to a few:

The times to obtain a fully charged battery from flat that I have recorded from various power sources are:

45 minutes ? 440 volt public super charger
7 hours ? 220 volt, 40 amp plug in my garage
77 hours ? standard 110 volt home wall outlet

All public charges, from Whole Foods, public garages, and movie theaters, etc., are provided for free by a company called ChargePoint (click here for their website). There you can view their national network of 10,954 public charging stations. When I visit my home at Lake Tahoe, where overnight temperatures go well below zero, the company recommends that I keep the car plugged in overnight, just to keep it warm.

No, I am not indirectly running this car on high polluting coal. Notice that the lights in your home turn on in the middle of the night, even though no one usually wants power then. Utilities must generate massive amounts of power that gets wasted in order to maintain ?grid integrity?, a network that makes electricity available to us 24/7.

How much is wasted? Enough to run all 250 million cars in the US on electric power. This is why they give it away nearly for free if you charge between midnight and 7:00 AM (4.7 cents/kw versus 40 cents in my case). I am simply using power that has already been generated that otherwise would go unused.

Tesla advertises a maximum range of 265 miles, which is based on an EPA five cycle testing standard. But you can really get 300 miles with conservative driving, which is more than your bladder can stand. One 45-minute charge at Harris Ranch gets me from San Francisco to San Diego, some 500 miles. For longer trips I fly my own plane, go commercial, or drive my other car.

I?m sure more questions will come in, and I will answer them periodically. Or you can call Tesla directly at 877-798-3752.

As for the stock, I wouldn?t touch it here. It is far too expensive for me. These kinds of new technology stocks tend to maintain enormous premiums in the early days because of the cache and ?coolness? of their products. You saw the same thing with Apple (AAPL). I have no doubt that the company will be a huge success. But at $34 a share, it is far ahead of delivering actual financial results for investors.

TSLA 2-21-13

Tesla

 

 

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