Business

Tesla market value tops $700 bil for first time

Latest surge means company is worth more than GM, Ford, Toyota, Honda, Fiat Chrysler and Volkswagen combined

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 07 Jan 2021 7:11AM

Tesla market value tops $700 bil for first time
Tesla’s share price ended with a gain of 2.8% for a total value of whopping $717 billion (RM2.88 trillion). That came after the stock saw a more than 700% ascendance in 2020, which some analysts viewed as inflated.– Twitter pic, January 7, 2021

NEW YORK – Electric carmaker Tesla closed trading yesterday with a market value topping US$700 billion (RM2.81) trillion) for the first time.

The latest surge means the company is worth more than General Motors, Ford, Toyota, Honda, Fiat Chrysler and Volkswagen combined.

Tesla’s share price ended with a gain of 2.8% to $755.98 (RM3.03 trillion) for a total value of whopping $717 billion (RM2.88 trillion). That came after the stock saw a more than 700% ascendance in 2020 – a gain some analysts viewed as inflated.

The auto industry disruptor led by Elon Musk wowed Wall Street yet again over the weekend, reporting annual car deliveries of 499,550, just shy of its 2020 target of half a million, but well above analyst estimates.

The disclosure capped a year that saw Tesla report a series of profitable quarters and join the S&P 500, establishing the company as one of the world’s most valuable businesses and elevating Musk to the second-wealthiest person behind Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos.

While industry analysts do not expect another massive surge in value this year, they remain optimistic about the company’s sales prospects, even if the cars remain out of reach for many buyers.

The optimism comes as construction continues on new Tesla factories in Texas and Germany, which will join existing plants in California and Shanghai that are ramping up production.

Musk has expressed determination to cut the price for Tesla's electric cars, which currently start at US$37,990 (RM152,359) in the US market.

The Tesla chief is developing battery design, material and production innovations that combine to cut the cost per kilowatt hour by 56%.

That should enable Tesla to field a US$25,000 (RM100,263) model in “three years-ish,” Musk said in September, adding, “it is absolutely critical that we make cars that people can actually afford.”

And US sales could be helped by president-elect Joe Biden’s commitment to green technology to combat climate change. – AFP, January 7, 2020

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