...regarding the Tesla growth stock thesis, he didn't defend it. He simply said just because a stock has been falling, doesn't mean it exited the Growth Stock categorization. Which is true. So if you want to say Tesla's 45% drop in the past 6 months is a ''pause'', say so. I contend that Tesla is finished as a growth stock. Competition is heating up. Tesla is a mature stock that will grow like many others, but not at a fast rate. 20% price improvement annually, is a growth stock. Those days are behind Tesla. If you want to define ''growth'' stock as exceeding the Market average (however minimal), say so. I believe Tesla will grow slightly higher than the average basket of stocks. Slightly. Like 2% more. If that is a growth stock to you, say so...
Originally Posted by Chung Tran
I'll overlook your arrogant tone and try to keep this as simple as possible.
You contradict yourself. First you agreed that movements in the price of a company's stock don't change its categorization. Then you argued that the reason Tesla is no longer a growth stock is because in your estimation, the share price is unlikely to outperform the rest of the market going forward. Do you see the contradiction?
Forget about the ups and downs of the share price. "Growth" pertains to how fast the underlying business is growing, as measured by sales value & volume. As noted in my link, Tesla's are currently doubling each year. Any company expanding at that pace falls squarely into the "growth" category, regardless of whether its stock price is going up or down.
It's silly to say things like "Tesla is a mature stock" when what you mean to say is the EV business in which Tesla competes will mature in the years ahead. Don't conflate Wall Street's buy/sell/hold recommendations with a company's growth outlook. If you want to tell everyone to avoid the stock, go right ahead. Just don't tell us it's not a growth stock when it's plain for all to see that Tesla's quarterly/annual sales continue to grow at a blistering pace.
One more thing you ignore - how much of Tesla's recent share price tumble has to do with the fact that Elon Musk is trying to pledge his stock as collateral to raise the financing he needs to buy Twitter? That's totally unrelated to Tesla's own business outlook.
Dozens of Wall Street analysts follow TSLA. Why don't you check how they currently categorize the stock (again, I don't mean their latest buy/sell/hold recommendations or target prices) before you decide to belabor the "not-a-growth-stock" point again? If you're lazy, just ask Tiny to do it. He obviously knows how to follow the "analyst consensus" better than you do.
https://hypebeast.com/2022/4/tesla-d...s-announcement