Written by Felix Richter, Statista.com
— this post authored by Felix Richter with added content by Econontersect
Forget General Motors, forget Ford. Tesla is now the largest car manufacturer in the United States. Or at least it was until the stock took a big swoon this week.
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While that is untrue for obvious reasons, the Californian electric car maker was in fact the country’s most valuable automobile company in terms of market capitalization. Having surpassed Ford back on April, Tesla’s share price continued to climb the next week, causing the company’s market cap to edge past General Motors. Considering the fact that Chrysler, the third of Detroit’s famous “Big Three” is no longer American-owned (it is a subsidiary of the Italian car company Fiat Chrysler), people are already starting to label Tesla, GM and Ford as the “New Big Three”.
For decades, the U.S. has taken pride in the Big Three as the country’s largest automobile manufacturers. All headquartered in Detroit, the epicenter of the U.S. car industry, the Big Three (and the supplier industry behind them) provide hundreds of thousands of manufacturing jobs in the country and drive a significant portion of the U.S. economy. Is Tesla really ready to join that club?
As our chart illustrates, Tesla’s numbers don’t really match its valuation yet. The company produces a fraction of the number of vehicles that GM and Ford produce; it trails in revenue and has yet to become profitable. Tesla’s current valuation is driven by the belief that the future of mobility is electric and that the company has enough of a headstart to eventually dominate that future.
You will find more statistics at Statista.
Content added by Econintersect
Tesla has lost more than 18% of its stock price over the past two weeks – see chart below. As reported in ‘What We Read Today‘ for 08 July, analysts think it can fall further. See After entering a bear market, tumbling Tesla shares could be poised to fall further (CNBC).