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Tesla on the upswing? Morgan Stanley with Top Pick rating | Whitecap and Veren merge to form oil giant

Tesla on the upswing

Morgan Stanley has again rated the Tesla share $TSLA (-9.97%) once again as a "top pick" and sees enormous price potential for the future. Despite the recent losses, there is plenty of reason for hope: the analysts have set a price target of 430 US dollars and thus a potential upside of over 60 percent compared to the current price of around 262 US dollars. Tesla's foray into the fields of artificial intelligence (AI), robotics and the energy business is identified as the main driver of the share price increase. Another positive aspect is the decreasing dependence on the Chinese market, which is expected to fall to 6-7% by 2030.


The year 2025 will be particularly exciting, as it could be decisive for Tesla's transformation. Despite the positive outlook, however, there are short-term challenges, such as the so-called "EV winter", which is currently weighing on the industry. Nevertheless, Morgan Stanley remains optimistic and maintains a long-term price target of USD 800, which is an exciting prospect for investors.


Whitecap and Veren merge to form oil giant

A major merger is causing a stir in Canada: Whitecap Resources Inc. $WCP (-10.36%) and Veren Inc. $VRN (-11.45%) have announced a strategic merger worth around 15 billion US dollars. The aim is to form a leading producer of light oil and condensate. This merger will make the two companies the largest landowners in the Alberta Montney and Duvernay regions. Expectations for synergies and improved profitability are high.


Under the terms of the merger agreement, Veren shareholders will receive 1.05 shares of Whitecap common stock for each share held. The transaction is expected to be completed by the end of May 2025. Following the merger, the new company will produce an impressive 370,000 boe/d (63% liquids) and could become Canada's largest producer of light oil. The management of both companies is confident that this merger will create significant value and sustainable growth for shareholders.


Sources:

https://www.finanzen.net/nachricht/aktien/bullishe-prognose-tesla-aktie-zurueck-an-der-spitze-morgan-stanley-sieht-enormes-kurspotenzial-14300417


https://www.finanzen.net/nachricht/aktien/whitecap-resources-and-veren-to-combine-in-a-15-billion-transaction-to-create-a-leading-canadian-light-oil-and-condensate-producer-14303465

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4 Comments

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I honestly don't understand the Tesla part, why are falling sales figures (aka dependency) in China a positive thing? And the robots are currently not even ready for delivery. AI actually belongs more to x / xAI, and Tesla is also losing ground to Chinese or European competitors in the energy business.
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a bit too enthusiastic assessment about Tesla: with a current P/E around 100, sales should grow x4 to justify the pricing in the long term. The reality is increasing competition, a stale product lineup, toxic environment around the brand which is hitting hard especially in friendly market (California, North EU, China). It takes little to shift the perception from "cool trendy hi-tech" stock to "just another car company" and then your P/E will drop down to 20 or less
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Tesla's sales figures collapse worldwide. China, Europe Australia etc. up to - 70%.
Cybertruck is a flop, only 40000 of the targeted 400000 were sold in 2024. Then the truck can't even be registered everywhere. Experts would have preferred a Model 2. Model maintenance is also lagging behind Tesla.
And Musk is now poison for the company.
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Has Morgan Stanley lost its mind? Even at current prices, Tesla is completely overvalued in terms of P/E and P/E ratio (going forward). This year I still see Tesla at under $200 (which is 2023/24 prices unless they achieve a breakthrough with FSD. But even their cab ambitions are now starting with human drivers for now and not as autopilot cabs.

Right now Tesla is simply nothing more than some car manufacturer that has very real problems. Everything else is fantasy .... and that is dwindling. The production of electric cars alone is no longer a USP. All other manufacturers have now mastered this quite well.
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