Tesla has been over-bought for years and everyone knows it, but as Keynes once said: the market can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent. My strategy has just been to stay away. TSLA could blow up in the next 6 months, or it could go up for the next 6 years. To me, at least, it's not worth f'ing around and finding out, especially when the market as a whole is doing so well.
wnevets · 8h ago
> but as Keynes once said: the market can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent. My strategy has just been to stay away
To take it a step a further, you cannot reason people out of a position that they did not reason themselves into.
clickety_clack · 7h ago
And “bonds are math, stocks are stories”.
DougN7 · 5h ago
Oooh, I like that one! Thanks for sharing it.
dzhiurgis · 1h ago
You forget it can stay flat. Butterfly option otherwise.
Arubis · 8h ago
It’s a liability on most index funds. I’m too lazy to manage active trading and shorting but would buy an ETF that tracks the S&P 500 minus TSLA.
rao-v · 8h ago
Why not just buy a put on TSLA of the right size? It's probably cheaper to Vanguard + a put than to buy a more expensive specialized ETF
Arubis · 7h ago
Honestly? Effort.
Daviey · 50m ago
I think that's the point of the suggestion, this approach is less effort/cost.
Rather than have a custom ETF you can get one that includes it then individually short Tesla to counteract your identified risk.
This would be cheaper and if your theory is correct, you'd outperform the S&P500.
the__alchemist · 8h ago
This is why I care. I've been putting less into the Vanguard 500, and more into my own diverse individual stock picks... I want the S&P or similar, but without a few specific stocks like this one.
hibikir · 8h ago
There's a few companies doing direct indexing like this, where you can give them a ban list for any given index: You can, say, also take out Microstrategy or something like that.
Now, as to whether those companies will remain solvent long enough, will give you simple enough taxes, and can keep expenses low while rebalancing is another story. You are doing frontier-ish things. It's not as if you have Vanguard or Fidelity offering products like that.
redox99 · 8h ago
Index funds usually outperform the average investor precisely because it stops them from picking and choosing like that.
robocat · 5h ago
Actually I read the other day that it is because indexes rebalance. If you buy the shares in an index and then hold, your returns are much lower than an index fund that is rebalanced. Unfortunately I can't find reference.
I also like this quote:
For US stocks, Wu of Sparkline estimates that accounting for intangible assets would cut perceived overvaluation by about 25 to 50 per cent, relative to headline valuation metrics. “While the market is by no means cheap, once firms are given credit for their intangible assets, valuations look far less frothy than the headlines imply,” he says.
I moved to FSPTX a while back because it doesn't have TSLA. I'm not sure how long I'll stay there though, it has like a quarter of its holdings in NVDA now which has been great so far but it's going to hurt when the AI bubble pops.
ac29 · 6h ago
> I moved to FSPTX a while back
0.62% ER, yikes
martythemaniak · 8h ago
It's only about 1-2 percent of most broad market funds, but if you do care it should be relatively easy to hedge. TSLQ is a 2X TSLA short etf, so if you have 100K in index funds, you'd buy like $750 worth of this.
digianarchist · 8h ago
Leveraged ETFs suffer from decay and shouldn't be held long term.
I got out when Elon Musk fired the whole Supercharger team.
That was roughly a year after the entire North American Auto industry standardized on the Supercharger standard, the Supercharger Network opened to non-tesla cars, and they were poised to expand.
The rational thing to do if Elon Musk didn't want to be in the charging business would be to spin out the Supercharger Network as a different company. Instead, he fired the entire team over a petty argument.
That was the first clear case of mismanagement that I saw.
oskarkk · 7h ago
Since that happened (a year ago) the Supercharger network grew from 6473 to 7377 stations, and from 59596 to 70228 connectors (numbers from Q2 2025 earnings release), so it's not like they stopped expanding the network after that layoff.
nativeit · 7h ago
I suppose if growth is all that matters, that's probably good news. It's probably worth mentioning a good chunk of those will have been the ongoing projects with current stock.
On the other hand, if long-term maintenance and optimizations for this absolutely critical new infrastructure are even a little bit of a priority? Then it's still unlikely the "smart" move to eliminate the entire department.
Also carrying around suitcases full of designer drugs is maybe a bad sign for CEO, staying up all night playing video games, and working--charitably speaking--"part time" are all rather uninspiring choices...
pfannkuchen · 6h ago
As a user I do feel like the supercharger network could be a lot better than it is. Is it possible that some internal goals were missed in a big way?
Also I guess I assumed they hired a new team. Did they not?
lawn · 5h ago
They panicked and tried to rehire the team...
thisisit · 51m ago
For years Tesla had been over promising and under delivering. It had to catch up sooner or later. I believe the flashpoint might have been the Tesla Cybertruck launch. These insiders should have knowledge about the issues and sales figures for the Cybertruck.
milchek · 8h ago
This is a genuine question, because the discussion here is centered around cars, but is Tesla not just a car company? Aren’t they trying to position themselves in robotics? I figured that’s where the pricing comes from - a mix of people betting on cars + robotics, and an automated robotic workforce + AI being the future of industrial and maybe even retail labour?
jaredklewis · 6h ago
Why would a robotics company justify higher valuations? Isn’t that going to be a capital intensive, low margin race to the bottom like cars?
Seems like only pure software businesses (which are extremely capital light and often come with network or lock in effects) can justify the really crazy valuations.
Ekaros · 39m ago
Thinking of it, is there anything Tesla is involved in that isn't in the end capital intensive needing to build actual things with possible competition driving margins down?
Hell, even robotaxis will have price pressure if market affords say 3 or 4 players. Not many will pay double compared to competition.
oskarkk · 7h ago
I think a big part of the valuation is self driving. If (and that's a big if) they would get it right, they could have cheaper taxi services than e.g. Uber ($200B market cap), without paying for drivers. And if self driving would work in consumer cars, profits from subscriptions could be big.
nativeit · 7h ago
I'd like to remind readers of "nuclear fusion", and how it became a meme for parting idiots with money...repeatedly.
root_axis · 7h ago
Well cars are what they sell, so I think that's a reasonable way to regard the company. All the other stuff doesn't have much substance behind it.
cm2187 · 8h ago
It can be all of that, and be a meme stock on top of that.
perilunar · 7h ago
They’re a battery company as much as a car company.
Ekaros · 36m ago
Is being battery company any better than being car company? You still have competition and are capital intensive and customers choose based on value. Probably even more so than with cars as products are not always on show.
CivBase · 8h ago
Are they a car company? A software company? An AI company? A robotics company? They seem to switch identies a lot and it makes them come across to me as a jack of all trades.
ies7 · 7h ago
I was told their from selling "carbon forgiveness/tax" to other ICE company is higher than their revenue from selling cars
amanaplanacanal · 8h ago
It makes sense. If you are overweighted in one company, especially one with a bit of a rocky future, it's time to diversify.
FridayoLeary · 8h ago
I was always mystified about the value of Tesla stocks. The pe is still absurdly high and the market cap is bigger then probably all the big manufacturers combined. It's obvious that people are investing in musk as a person. But there has to be a correction sooner or later. Tesla has value as a car company, but their first mover advantage is dwindling. Add to that musks politics and it's not surprising that the executives are reading the writing on the wall.
crooked-v · 8h ago
They had, and still have, an immense first mover advantage in the internals of EVs - look at some of the mechanic analyses/teardowns of Tesla internals and it's a night-and-day difference against other US EVs in terms of engineering around reliability, simplicity, and efficiency.
But, they never actually followed that up with truly improving the the vehicle interior and all the other bits of build quality, and then doubled down with the Cybertruck, which has brilliant internals wrapped in bodywork that's impossible to clean and with trim that will literally fall off in the wrong weather.
kcb · 8h ago
> But, they never actually followed that up with truly improving the the vehicle interior and all the other bits of build quality,
But that's exactly what they've done with the latest Model 3 and Y updates.
heod749 · 3h ago
> But that's exactly what they've done with the latest Model 3 and Y updates.
Still waiting for 2026 Juniper Model Y to implement any of the following:
- leather interior
- metal and wood trim options
- heads up display
- power sunshades
- cream/brown interior color
- rear ventilated seats
But I guess “ambient lighting” is ground breaking technology since it was not implemented in 2025 model Y.
dchftcs · 8h ago
One drawback cited consistently about Tesla cars is poor suspension. They may or may not have better design overall, and have better EV manufacturing than US competitors, but I don't see an "immense advantage" when they fail to address one of the things many users easily feel.
rrrrrrrrrrrryan · 3h ago
There's also so much road noise.
They designed the car bodies to be light for battery-related reasons, but in doing so, the cabins of even their luxury cars sound like budget economy vehicles.
kcb · 8h ago
That was addressed with the Model 3 and Y updates.
If a lot of investors are in passive funds, they end up buying a lot of whatever is biggest... which drives up the prices... which makes those stocks bigger parts of the stock market... repeat until ???.
rrrrrrrrrrrryan · 2h ago
Right now about 45% of the market is passively invested, and economists estimate you'd need 80%+ passive investments for active investors to reliably beat the market. We're not close to it yet.
foobarian · 8h ago
He's been quiet lately, wonder if he's off quietly building a revenge party
how do these ppl have so much energy. I am in early 40s and i feel like chilling whenever i can.
danielheath · 8h ago
Perhaps that’d be different if you could afford to have a team of doctors monitor your bloodwork etc and adjust medication to maintain energy, a personal chef consulting with them to ensure your meals help that, stylists to pick out tailored clothes for each occasion, regular massage, personal training, etc.
They’re a different kind of rich that those who merely have a spare 30 million or so.
20after4 · 8h ago
Drugs, most likely.
dzhiurgis · 1h ago
You lack motivation, not energy. It’s pretty hard to get tired when you have variety of interesting projects (with humans or llm’s to aid you)
marcosdumay · 8h ago
They don't actually work.
sumedh · 8h ago
Motivation to get more power and money.
XorNot · 5h ago
They don't run their own lives.
They have people to coordinate their housing, transportation and children.
They don't cook or clean for themselves, they can simply rent out luxury accomodations wherever they land and if an idea hits them at any hour then some person is being paid to answer the phone and figure out what the heck it actually means they should do at 3am when they thought of it.
And then when they turn up somewhere, they talk solely about how hard they worked before someone tells them their next meeting, where dinner will be tonight and here's your private driver.
patchtopic · 7h ago
since space joffrey only owns about 12% of the shares, the other shareholders should vote the clown out..
nativeit · 7h ago
Well, sadly, Space Cersei owns another good chunk, and Space Jaime has a bunch, then Space Reek is surprisingly well-endowed, and Space Baelish is probably somewhere in the mix. All of whom sit on the Space Iron Council, and advise Space Joffrey about what dank memes they should focus on during the upcoming Space Tourney, where they will be testing new Space Fire Water to use on the Walkers approaching the Space Mexican Border. At least, until the Master of Tired Analogies signals the end of festivities by beating a dead Space Horse.
Ericson2314 · 8h ago
Our car industry has been told to get its shit together and failed or not even tried so many times.
It's times to just let in BYD for a few years and just slaughter all the incumbents. I don't care what we do after that. But a bloody reckoning is sorely needed.
FridayoLeary · 8h ago
It's happening already. The affordable car market is being increasingly neglected. Ford has abandoned their best selling focus and fiesta models and are chasing a more premium market. Expect soulless Chinese models to fill in the gaps.
theLiminator · 8h ago
> Expect soulless Chinese models to fill in the gaps.
As opposed to the soulful American models?
hron749 · 8h ago
> As opposed to the soulful American models?
he thinks Teslas have soul … the soul of Elon
kelseyfrog · 8h ago
Each Tesla, a horcrux.
hron749 · 8h ago
> Expect soulless Chinese models to fill in the gaps.
What’s wrong with soulless Chinese $20k crossover/compact SUVs?
White, gray, and black $40-100k Mercedes, Porsche Cayennes, and Cadillac Escalades are equally soulless.
nine_k · 8h ago
Grey? A Cayenne should of course be mustard color.
heod749 · 8h ago
> Grey? A Cayenne should of course be mustard color.
Paint to Sample $13,450
nine_k · 8h ago
Why not soulful Japanese or Korean models? (KIA Soul, anyone?)
nativeit · 7h ago
So if we leave the racism aside, we can look forward to some solid choices? That's assuming the racist tariffs don't inflate the prices for the affordable options I suppose...it sure does seem like racism might be making things worse on both fronts.
cmxch · 8h ago
Not in the US they won’t.
The Chinese option would actually have to have some compelling features and marketing to overcome their significant barriers to entry.
And not being Tesla is not one of them.
sagarm · 6h ago
BYD stands for "build your dreams." Seems like soul to me.
nine_k · 8h ago
When Toyota, Honda, Mitsubishi, Hyundai, KIA, etc came, and Detroit turned into a zombie city, did it help?
Well, I can admit that Ford learned from Honda quite a bit, which could be readily seen in their Focus line. Is it their fault that consumers stubbornly want the likes of F-150 or Chevy Suburban, which are not even proper cars?
valleyer · 8h ago
Yes, it helped that I was able to buy high-quality Toyota cars.
coolspot · 7h ago
We wouldn’t have Eminem
lucidone · 8h ago
It helped consumers a lot.
helloooooooo · 8h ago
Why is consumerism the metric here, and not general societal health?
Ericson2314 · 8h ago
Cars are bad, but there are far more people driving a car than working in the automobile industry. The former has a better claim to societal health than the latter.
mlrtime · 6h ago
Cars are not "bad", and there are far more people driving than taking public transportation. Most of them prefer it.
nine_k · 4h ago
Cars are good in some circumstances, mass transit, in other circumstances. One size does not fit all.
Small, inexpensive cars would also be good in some circumstances, but the US auto industry, for some reason, struggles to offer something as compact as Honda Fit, or at least something as reliable as Toyota Corolla.
nativeit · 7h ago
Just to be clear, American car manufacturers bear zero responsibility in this scenario?
nine_k · 6h ago
The US car makers were very much responsible for their demise in 2000s. My question is: did the fierce competition help? Has the "blood reckoning" ever happened? What was the cost of it?
Ericson2314 · 8h ago
We also need pigouvian taxation to make the $100,000 pickup and SUV crowd suffer, yes.
mlrtime · 6h ago
I'm sorry but the insufferable big city progressives have leaked their way into HN.
Your "need" is a feel good story with 0 chance of ever passing as Federal law, thank god. Pass it in your state if you wish.
nine_k · 4h ago
Did you, perchance, hear about San Francisco, CA, and the whole "Bay Area"? :)
To take it a step a further, you cannot reason people out of a position that they did not reason themselves into.
Rather than have a custom ETF you can get one that includes it then individually short Tesla to counteract your identified risk.
This would be cheaper and if your theory is correct, you'd outperform the S&P500.
Now, as to whether those companies will remain solvent long enough, will give you simple enough taxes, and can keep expenses low while rebalancing is another story. You are doing frontier-ish things. It's not as if you have Vanguard or Fidelity offering products like that.
I also like this quote:
- https://archive.is/t1On80.62% ER, yikes
https://www.etf.com/sections/etf-basics/why-do-leveraged-etf...
That was roughly a year after the entire North American Auto industry standardized on the Supercharger standard, the Supercharger Network opened to non-tesla cars, and they were poised to expand.
The rational thing to do if Elon Musk didn't want to be in the charging business would be to spin out the Supercharger Network as a different company. Instead, he fired the entire team over a petty argument.
That was the first clear case of mismanagement that I saw.
On the other hand, if long-term maintenance and optimizations for this absolutely critical new infrastructure are even a little bit of a priority? Then it's still unlikely the "smart" move to eliminate the entire department.
Also carrying around suitcases full of designer drugs is maybe a bad sign for CEO, staying up all night playing video games, and working--charitably speaking--"part time" are all rather uninspiring choices...
Also I guess I assumed they hired a new team. Did they not?
Seems like only pure software businesses (which are extremely capital light and often come with network or lock in effects) can justify the really crazy valuations.
Hell, even robotaxis will have price pressure if market affords say 3 or 4 players. Not many will pay double compared to competition.
But, they never actually followed that up with truly improving the the vehicle interior and all the other bits of build quality, and then doubled down with the Cybertruck, which has brilliant internals wrapped in bodywork that's impossible to clean and with trim that will literally fall off in the wrong weather.
But that's exactly what they've done with the latest Model 3 and Y updates.
Still waiting for 2026 Juniper Model Y to implement any of the following:
- leather interior
- metal and wood trim options
- heads up display
- power sunshades
- cream/brown interior color
- rear ventilated seats
But I guess “ambient lighting” is ground breaking technology since it was not implemented in 2025 model Y.
They designed the car bodies to be light for battery-related reasons, but in doing so, the cabins of even their luxury cars sound like budget economy vehicles.
If a lot of investors are in passive funds, they end up buying a lot of whatever is biggest... which drives up the prices... which makes those stocks bigger parts of the stock market... repeat until ???.
They’re a different kind of rich that those who merely have a spare 30 million or so.
They have people to coordinate their housing, transportation and children.
They don't cook or clean for themselves, they can simply rent out luxury accomodations wherever they land and if an idea hits them at any hour then some person is being paid to answer the phone and figure out what the heck it actually means they should do at 3am when they thought of it.
And then when they turn up somewhere, they talk solely about how hard they worked before someone tells them their next meeting, where dinner will be tonight and here's your private driver.
It's times to just let in BYD for a few years and just slaughter all the incumbents. I don't care what we do after that. But a bloody reckoning is sorely needed.
As opposed to the soulful American models?
he thinks Teslas have soul … the soul of Elon
What’s wrong with soulless Chinese $20k crossover/compact SUVs?
White, gray, and black $40-100k Mercedes, Porsche Cayennes, and Cadillac Escalades are equally soulless.
Paint to Sample $13,450
The Chinese option would actually have to have some compelling features and marketing to overcome their significant barriers to entry.
And not being Tesla is not one of them.
Well, I can admit that Ford learned from Honda quite a bit, which could be readily seen in their Focus line. Is it their fault that consumers stubbornly want the likes of F-150 or Chevy Suburban, which are not even proper cars?
Small, inexpensive cars would also be good in some circumstances, but the US auto industry, for some reason, struggles to offer something as compact as Honda Fit, or at least something as reliable as Toyota Corolla.
Your "need" is a feel good story with 0 chance of ever passing as Federal law, thank god. Pass it in your state if you wish.