Michael Burry slams Tesla as ‘ridiculously overvalued’ in fresh broadside

‘The Big Short’ investor warns shareholder dilution and Musk’s vast pay deal inflate EV maker’s value

Burry estimates that Tesla dilutes its shareholders at about 3.6% a year with no buybacks, and Musk’s record-breaking pay package will continue the dilution. (Jim Spellman)

Bengaluru — “The Big Short” investor Michael Burry took aim at electric carmaker Tesla in a blog post, saying the Elon Musk-led company is “ridiculously overvalued”, days after he voiced concerns about the current AI boom.

Burry estimated that Tesla dilutes its shareholders at about 3.6% per year with no buybacks, and Musk’s record-breaking pay package will continue the dilution.

“Tesla’s market capitalisation is ridiculously overvalued today and has been for a good long time,” Burry wrote in his Substack newsletter Cassandra Unchained on Sunday.

The pay package could get the Tesla CEO as much as $1-trillion in stock over the next decade, provided Musk, already the world’s richest man, ensures the company achieves a series of milestones.

Elon Musk (GONZALO FUENTES)

Tesla’s stock last closed at roughly 209 times forward earnings — more than double its five-year average of 94. By comparison, the S&P 500 trades at about 22 times forward earnings, according to LSEG data.

Tesla did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

The bearish view against Tesla is not Burry’s first. Scion Asset Management disclosed a large bearish bet via options on Tesla in May 2021.

He later told CNBC in October 2021 that he was no longer betting against the company and that his position was just a trade.

Burry’s short position against subprime mortgage securities during the housing market crash was chronicled in Michael Lewis’s book The Big Short and its film adaptation.

Recently, Burry has stepped up criticism of technology heavyweights such as Nvidia and Palantir Technologies, questioning the cloud infrastructure boom and accusing major providers of using aggressive accounting to inflate profits from their massive hardware investments.

Burry launched Cassandra Unchained in November, saying the paid newsletter had his “full attention” after he closed his hedge fund, Scion Asset Management, and returned capital to investors.

Reuters


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