NEW YORK—Should Elon Musk decide to unload some of his stake in Tesla Inc, he will be capitalizing on a massive rally that has made the electric-vehicle maker one of the world’s most valuable companies.
The Tesla chief asked his Twitter followers on Saturday if he should sell 10 percent of his Tesla stake. Nearly 58 percent said they would support such a sale, leading the stock to fall 4.9 percent when trading resumed on Monday.
Musk polled his Twitter followers after a jump in Tesla shares in recent weeks extended a strong, if volatile, run for the stock since it was added to the S&P 500 index late last year.
Trading in Tesla has averaged $19 billion a day in the past three months, more than any other U.S. company, according to Refinitiv data.
Here is a closer look at Tesla’s shares:
After falling in the first half of 2021, Tesla shares have soared in recent weeks. Since Oct. 20, the stock has gained some 34 percent, with the S&P 500 up 3.6 percent over that time, a move that has pushed the electric-car maker’s market value over $1 trillion.
With those recent gains, Tesla shares have now surged 67 percent since the stock joined the S&P 500 in late December, versus a 27 percent gain for the benchmark index over that time.
Tesla accounts for about 2.5 percent of the S&P 500’s $4 trillion market capitalization. That compares to 1.8 percent when Tesla joined the index in December 2020.
Tesla’s valuation has crept lower in recent months, as analysts increase their earnings forecasts. Analysts on average see Tesla’s 2022 earnings per share at $7.92, up from an average estimate of $5.50 per share in February.
However, Tesla’s PE valuation remains sky-high, with the stock now trading at 150-times future earnings, compared to 21 times for the S&P 500.
Short bets against Tesla have declined this year as the stock’s rally forced some investors to cover their positions.
The number of Tesla shares shorted stood at 29.5 million, down from 60.6 million at the start of January, analytics firm S3 Partners said on Monday. The short position in Tesla as a percentage of the company’s float is down to 3.6 percent from about 8 percent at the start of the year.
Still, Tesla’s short interest, a measure of the stock’s price and number of shares shorted, amounted to nearly $36.1 billion, larger than any other stock, according to S3.
Tesla and other car companies’ shares have notched big swings this year as the auto sector goes through upheavals related to the global supply crisis and other effects of the coronavirus pandemic. Tesla’s stock has gained or lost 2 percent in a session 99 times so far in 2021, compared to 79 times for Ford Motor and just five times for the S&P 500.