Tesla is now more valuable than the combination of the world’s top seven traditional automakers, despite only delivering half a million cars this year.
Why it matters: Anyone searching for evidence that the stock market and the real economy are not the same thing, should look no further.
- Tesla’s frenzied ride in the capital markets culminated on Monday in the company being the largest entrant ever be included in the S&P 500, the main benchmark stock index.
Tesla’s true believers are not paying for the actual performance, but they are betting on Elon Musk as a visionary and the potential upside in the still-nascent electric vehicle market.
- The merits of that investment thesis diverge greatly from the current state of affairs in the automotive industry, and the broader economy.
Reality check: The overall equity market’s meteoric rise in the face of a U.S. economy that will end 2020 3% smaller than it started the year, is just the latest example of the economic reality decoupling from stocks.
Aja Whitaker-Moore | Axios