Tag Archives: Tesla

Tesla Boots the Bitcoin Bandwagon Closer to Corporate America

Bloomberg

EV Company With Almost No Revenue Posts 3,000% Gain in 8 Months

(Bloomberg) — There is nothing about the finances of Blink Charging Co. that would suggest it’s one of the hottest stocks in America.It’s never posted an annual profit in its 11-year history; it warned last year it could go bankrupt; it’s losing market share, pulls in anemic revenue and has churned through management in recent years.And yet a hot stock it is. Investors have bid Blink’s share price up 3,000% over the past eight months. Only seven stocks — out of about 2,700 that are worth at least $1 billion — have risen more over that time. The reason: Blink is a green-energy company, an owner and operator of charging stations that power up electric vehicles. And if investors are certain of one thing in the mania that is sweeping through financial markets, it is that green companies are can’t-miss, must-own investments of the future.No stock better captures this euphoria than Blink. With a market capitalization of $2.17 billion as of Monday, its enterprise value-to-sales ratio — a common metric to gauge whether a stock is overvalued — has blown out to 481. For some context, at Tesla Inc. — the darling of the EV world and a company with a very rich valuation itself — that number is just 26.“Everything about it is wrong,” said Andrew Left, the founder of Citron Research. “It is just a cute name which caught the eye of retail investors.”Citron was one of a handful of firms that bet against Blink last year, putting on short-sale trades that would pay off if the share price fell. It’s one of several wagers against stocks favored by the retail-investment crowd that have gone against Citron — with GameStop Corp. being the most high-profile — and prompted Left to declare Jan. 29 that the firm was abandoning its research into short-selling targets. Overall short interest on Blink — a gauge of the amount of wagers against the stock — has fallen to under 25% of free-floating shares from more than 40% in late December.For the short-sellers, one of the things that raised alarms is that several figures tied to Blink, including CEO and Chairman Michael Farkas, were linked to companies that ran afoul of securities regulations years ago.Farkas dismisses this and the other criticisms lobbied by the shorts. “There have been and always will be naysayers,” Farkas said in an email. “When I founded the business, the naysayers questioned whether the shift to EV was real. Now, as the value of our business grows, the naysayers tend to be the short sellers.”Also See: Bloomberg Intelligence’s Environmental, Social, and Corporate Governance DashboardIn the CrosshairsMaking money on charging is, historically, a losing proposition. In theory, a model like Blink’s that involves both equipment sales and collecting user fees could become consistently profitable as government support accelerates EV adoption. But no one’s done it yet.“This market is still too small and early-stage,” said Pavel Molchanov, an analyst at Raymond James & Associates. “It will take time for economies of scale to materialize.”Even by the industry’s fairly forgiving standards, Blink’s revenue is meager, totaling an estimated $5.5 million in 2020. ChargePoint Inc., which announced plans to go public via a special purpose acquisition company last year, generated $144.5 million in revenue in 2020, according to a January filing. EVgo Services LLC, which is nearing a similar deal to go public through a SPAC, has a smaller charging network than Blink but more than double the sales — an estimated $14 million in 2020. Despite the wildly different revenue figures, all three companies have an enterprise value of between $2.1 billion and $2.4 billion.Blink warned in a May filing that its finances “raise substantial doubt about the Company’s ability to continue as a going concern within a year,” a required disclosure when a company doesn’t have enough cash on hand for 18 months of expenses.“Electric is real. The stock prices of companies in the space are not,” said Erik Gordon, an assistant professor at University of Michigan’s Ross School of Business. “The dot-com boom produced some real companies, but most of the overpriced dot-com companies were lousy investments. The electric boom will be the same story. Some great companies will be built, but most of the investors who chase insanely-priced companies will be crying.”Still, the recent market boom has breathed new life into Blink, allowing it to raise $232.1 million though a share offering in January. Roth Capital Partners as recently as Friday recommended buying the stock, giving it a price target of $67, 29% above the current level.Shares fell 2.3% to $52.10 in New York Monday.The company’s prospects rely on exponential EV growth, and Farkas in January discussed plans to deploy roughly 250,000 chargers “over the next several years” and often touts the company’s ability to generate recurring revenue from its network.Currently, the company says it has 6,944 charging stations in its network. An internal map of Blink’s public fleet lists about 3,700 stations available in the U.S. By contrast, ChargePoint boasts a global public and private charging network that’s more than 15 times larger.Unlike some of its competitors, Blink’s revenue model hinges in part on driving up utilization rates, which for now remain in the “low-single-digits,” too scant to generate significant revenue, Farkas said during a November earnings call. He told Bloomberg that use will increase as EVs become more popular.For most chargers in operation now, utilization probably must reach 10%-15% to break even, although profitability depends on many other factors such as a company’s business model, electricity rates and capital costs, according to BloombergNEF Senior Associate Ryan Fisher.Blink was an early market leader among charging companies but has lost its lead and now controls about 4% of the sector in Level 2 public charging, said Nick Nigro, founder of Atlas Public Policy, an electric car consulting and policy firm.Blink has also acknowledged “material weaknesses” over its financial reporting, disclosed in U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filings dating back to 2011. The company says it has hired an accounting consultant to review its controls and is making necessary changes.Origin StoryBlink’s colorful origin story has been a prime target of short-sellers. It traces back to 2006 when it formed as shell company New Image Concepts Inc. to provide “top-drawer” personal consulting services related to grooming, wardrobe and entertainment, according to an SEC filing.In December 2009, the company entered a share exchange agreement with Car Charging Inc. Farkas joined the company as CEO in 2010, after working as a stockbroker and investing in companies including Skyway Communications Holding Corp., which the SEC deemed a “pump-and-dump scheme” during the years Farkas held shares. (Farkas said he was a passive investor, was unaware of any misdeeds and “had no involvement in any capacity in the activities of Skyway.”)In 2013, Farkas oversaw Car Charging’s $3.3 million purchase of bankrupt Ecotality, which had received more than $100 million in U.S. Department of Energy grants to install chargers nationwide. The company later changed its name to Blink.Since then, Blink has been plagued by executive turnover, with three of five board members departing between November 2018 and November 2019. The company has had two chief financial officers and three chief operating officers since 2017. One former COO, James Christodoulou, was fired in March 2020. He sued the company, accusing it of potential securities violations, and reached a settlement with Blink, which denied any wrongdoing, for $400,000 in October.Financier Justin Keener, a one-time major Blink shareholder whose capital assisted the company’s 2018 Nasdaq listing, and the company he operated were charged last year for failing to register as a securities dealer while allegedly selling billions of penny-stock shares unrelated to Blink. He said he has since divested from Blink and now owns “a relatively small number of common shares” as a result of a settlement of a warrant dispute with the company. Keener denies the SEC allegations.Farkas told Bloomberg he has cut all ties to Keener, was unaware of any investigations going on while they worked together and has no knowledge of any wrongdoing by Keener.The surging stock has brought a windfall to Farkas, Blink’s largest shareholder. On Jan. 12, after shares rallied to records, he sold $22 million of stock, according to Bloomberg data. Farkas’s total compensation, including stock awards, totaled $6.5 million from 2016 to 2019, equivalent to more than half the company’s revenue. Included in his 2018 compensation were $394,466 in commissions to Farkas Group Inc., a third-party entity he controlled that Blink hired to install chargers.Farkas said his compensation is justified given that he had personally invested in the company’s formation and had for many years received shares in lieu of salary.More recently, Blink board member Donald Engel followed the CEO’s lead.He sold more than $18 million of shares during the past two weeks.(Updates share price in 15th paragraph and market value in fourth.)For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.comSubscribe now to stay ahead with the most trusted business news source.©2021 Bloomberg L.P.

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Is Stock Market Rally Overheating? Bitcoin Surges On Tesla News| Investor’s Business Daily

Dow Jones futures, along with S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq 100 futures, were mixed late Monday, as the stock market rally set more record highs. Bitcoin surged over 18% after Tesla purchased $1.5 billion worth of the cryptocurrency. Tech titan Nvidia and Dow Jones leader Disney broke out past new buy point.




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The stock market added to last week’s torrid gains, as the tech-heavy Nasdaq composite rallied 0.95%. The S&P 500 moved up 0.7%, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 0.8%.

Among the Dow Jones leaders, Apple (AAPL) rallied 0.1%, while Microsoft (MSFT) also rose 0.1%. Apple stock remains below its recent buy point, while Microsoft is now out of buy range. Nike (NKE) is approaching a new buy point after bullishly regaining a key level in recent sessions. Disney (DIS) broke out past a new buy point Monday amid a sharp rise.

Tesla (TSLA) rallied 1.3% Monday on Bitcoin news and is again nearing all-time highs.

Among top stocks in or near buy zones, chip giant Nvidia (NVDA) is in buy range above an early buy point, while Dropbox (DBX) is trying to break out past a new buy point.

Apple, Microsoft and Tesla are IBD Leaderboard stocks. Nvidia was the IBD Stock Of The Day, while Dropbox was Monday’s IBD 50 Stocks To Watch pick. Meanwhile, Nike was featured in this week’s Stocks Near A Buy Zone.

Dow Jones Futures Today: Biden Stimulus Talks

After the stock market close Monday, Dow Jones futures and S&P 500 inched higher vs. fair value, while Nasdaq 100 futures dropped less than 0.1%. Remember that trading in Dow Jones futures and elsewhere doesn’t necessarily translate into actual trading in the next regular stock market session.

Late Friday, the House voted to confirm the fast track of President Biden’s $1.9 trillion stimulus package. The budget resolution allows the Biden stimulus plan to pass with a bare majority, instead of needing 60 Senate votes to avoid a filibuster.

President Joe Biden’s Twitter account stressed the importance of acting quickly, “We don’t have a second to waste when it comes to delivering the American people the relief they desperately need. I’m calling on Congress to act quickly and pass the American Rescue Plan.”

Meanwhile, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said the bill would be passed by the end of the month.

Among exchange traded funds, Innovator IBD 50 (FFTY) jumped 2.4% Monday. The Nasdaq 100-linked Invesco QQQ Trust ETF (QQQ) traded up 0.7%. Meanwhile, the SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY) rallied 0.7%.

U.S. Stock Market Today Overview

Index Symbol Price Gain/Loss % Change
Dow Jones (0DJIA) 31385.02 +236.78 +0.76
S&P 500 (0S&P5) 3915.58 +28.75 +0.74
Nasdaq (0NDQC ) 13987.64 +131.34 +0.95
Russell 2000 (IWM) 227.27 +5.62 +2.54
IBD 50 (FFTY) 47.72 +1.11 +2.38
Last Update: 4:36 PM ET 2/8/2021

Stock Market Rally Overheating?

Looking back at the current uptrend, November was a key month for the stock market. IBD’s The Big Picture flagged the new uptrend following the market’s bullish follow-through day on Nov. 4. Meanwhile, the start of February has the Dow Jones Industrial Average, Nasdaq and S&P 500 hitting record highs. But is the stock market rally overheating?

Monday’s Big Picture warned, “Investors who’ve been buying on breakouts can enjoy the fruits of their trades, but have to ask themselves if the stock market is overextended. The Nasdaq and S&P 500 are close to piercing trends lines touching index highs stretching back to November. As the Big Picture has repeatedly noted, the Nasdaq’s gap with its 50-day moving average is dangerously high.”

It continued, “If the stock market will topple, one of the first signs will be erosion in the leading stocks. So far, those premium stocks are holding up well. The IBD 50 rose 1.4% and is near new highs.”

Due to the recent strength, investors can shift back to an offense stance, with an understanding that there are still good reasons for caution. Look for stocks that are breaking out above new buy points, like Disney, Dropbox and Nvidia.

Focus on stocks that showed strong relative strength during the recent weakness. They could be some of the market’s leaders if the indexes are able to continue their record-setting ways.


Stock Market ETF Strategy And How To Invest


Bitcoin Price

The price of Bitcoin surged more than 18% to all-time highs Monday after Tesla said it purchased $1.5 billion worth of Bitcoin for “more flexibility to further diversify and maximize returns on our cash,” according to a SEC filing. The electric-auto leader also said it would start accepting payments in Bitcoin.

The price of Bitcoin reached as high as $47,500 before paring gains to about $46,500 in evening trade, according to Coindesk.

The Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC) surged over 20%, as it continues to rebound from its 50-day moving average line.

Dow Jones Stocks: Disney, Nike

Dow Jones stock Disney broke out and is in buy range past a 183.50 buy point in a flat base, according to IBD MarketSmith chart analysis. The 5% buy area goes up to 192.68. Disney stock advanced 4.9% Monday.

Disney will report earnings after the close Thursday.

Elsewhere in the Dow 30, Nike is tracing a new flat base with a 148.05 buy point. The stock slipped 1.2% Monday.

Nike shares bullishly regained their 50-day moving average line in recent sessions.

Stocks In Or Near Buy Zones: Dropbox, Nvidia, ServiceNow

Monday’s IBD 50 Stocks To Watch pick, Dropbox, is trying to break out above a 25.26 buy point in a cup base. Shares rallied as much as 3.5% Monday before reversing slightly lower. The stock is just below the new buy point.

According to IBD Stock Checkup, Dropbox stock boasts a perfect 99 IBD Composite Rating. The Composite Rating — an easy way to identify top growth stocks — is a blend of key fundamental and technical metrics to help investors gauge a stock’s strengths.

Dropbox ranks No. 42 in the IBD 50 list.

IBD Leaderboard stock Nvidia is tracing a flat base with a 587.76 buy point. Shares are just 2% away from the entry amid Monday’s 6.2% advance. But shares are also moving above an early entry at 560.07. Investors could start with a small position at this alternative buy point.

According to Leaderboard commentary, “Nvidia cleared an alternative entry from its January highs. The stock continues to work on a flat or saucer base. Nvidia was cut to a quarter position Jan. 27 but is back to a half with today’s move.”


IBD Live: A New Tool For Daily Stock Market Analysis


Tesla Stock

IBD Leaderboard stock Tesla neared record highs Monday, rallying more than 1% after the company’s Bitcoin news.

The Jan. 8 IBD Stock Of The Day column signaled that Tesla was flashing several signs of a climax top amid a sharply vertical run over the past few weeks. But so far the stock is showing tremendous resilience after hitting record highs in recent weeks.

On Jan. 25, Tesla stock hit a record high at 900.40. Shares are about 84% above a 466 buy point in a cup with handle amid Monday’s action.

Dow Jones Leaders: Apple, Microsoft

Among the top Dow Jones stocks, Apple moved up 0.1% Monday, but remains below its 138.89 buy point in a cup with handle. Shares gave up the entry on Jan. 28.

Meanwhile, Microsoft rallied 0.1% Monday. Shares of the software giant broke out past a 228.22 buy point in recent sessions and are out of the 5% buy zone that goes up to 239.63.

Be sure to follow Scott Lehtonen on Twitter at @IBD_SLehtonen for more on growth stocks and the Dow Jones futures.

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Bitcoin surges after Elon Musk’s Tesla makes $1.5B investment

Bloomberg

EV Company With Almost No Revenue Posts 3,000% Gain in 8 Months

(Bloomberg) — There is nothing about the finances of Blink Charging Co. that would suggest it’s one of the hottest stocks in America.It’s never posted an annual profit in its 11-year history; it warned last year it could go bankrupt; it’s losing market share, pulls in anemic revenue and has churned through management in recent years.And yet a hot stock it is. Investors have bid Blink’s share price up 3,000% over the past eight months. Only seven stocks — out of about 2,700 that are worth at least $1 billion — have risen more over that time. The reason: Blink is a green-energy company, an owner and operator of charging stations that power up electric vehicles. And if investors are certain of one thing in the mania that is sweeping through financial markets, it is that green companies are can’t-miss, must-own investments of the future.No stock better captures this euphoria than Blink. With a market cap today of $2.3 billion, its enterprise value-to-sales ratio — a common metric to gauge whether a stock is overvalued — has blown out to 493. For some context, at Tesla Inc. — the darling of the EV world and a company with a very rich valuation itself — that number is just 25.“Everything about it is wrong,” said Andrew Left, the founder of Citron Research. “It is just a cute name which caught the eye of retail investors.”Citron was one of a handful of firms that bet against Blink last year, putting on short-sale trades that would pay off if the share price fell. It’s one of several wagers against stocks favored by the retail-investment crowd that have gone against Citron — with GameStop Corp. being the most high-profile — and prompted Left to declare Jan. 29 that the firm was abandoning its research into short-selling targets. Overall short interest on Blink — a gauge of the amount of wagers against the stock — has fallen to under 25% of free-floating shares from more than 40% in late December.For the short-sellers, one of the things that raised alarms is that several figures tied to Blink, including CEO and Chairman Michael Farkas, were linked to companies that ran afoul of securities regulations years ago.Farkas dismisses this and the other criticisms lobbied by the shorts. “There have been and always will be naysayers,” Farkas said in an email. “When I founded the business, the naysayers questioned whether the shift to EV was real. Now, as the value of our business grows, the naysayers tend to be the short sellers.”Also See: Bloomberg Intelligence’s Environmental, Social, and Corporate Governance DashboardIn the CrosshairsMaking money on charging is, historically, a losing proposition. In theory, a model like Blink’s that involves both equipment sales and collecting user fees could become consistently profitable as government support accelerates EV adoption. But no one’s done it yet.“This market is still too small and early-stage,” said Pavel Molchanov, an analyst at Raymond James & Associates. “It will take time for economies of scale to materialize.”Even by the industry’s fairly forgiving standards, Blink’s revenue is meager, totaling an estimated $5.5 million in 2020. ChargePoint Inc., which announced plans to go public via a special purpose acquisition company last year, generated $144.5 million in revenue in 2020, according to a January filing. EVgo Services LLC, which is nearing a similar deal to go public through a SPAC, has a smaller charging network than Blink but more than double the sales — an estimated $14 million in 2020. Despite the wildly different revenue figures, all three companies have an enterprise value of between $2.1 billion and $2.4 billion.Blink warned in a May filing that its finances “raise substantial doubt about the Company’s ability to continue as a going concern within a year,” a required disclosure when a company doesn’t have enough cash on hand for 18 months of expenses.“Electric is real. The stock prices of companies in the space are not,” said Erik Gordon, an assistant professor at University of Michigan’s Ross School of Business. “The dot-com boom produced some real companies, but most of the overpriced dot-com companies were lousy investments. The electric boom will be the same story. Some great companies will be built, but most of the investors who chase insanely-priced companies will be crying.”Still, the recent market boom has breathed new life into Blink, allowing it to raise $232.1 million though a share offering in January. Roth Capital Partners as recently as Friday recommended buying the stock, giving it a price target of $67, 26% above the current level.Shares traded 1.6% higher at 1:41 p.m. in New York on Monday, after rallying as much as 8.8%.The company’s prospects rely on exponential EV growth, and Farkas in January discussed plans to deploy roughly 250,000 chargers “over the next several years” and often touts the company’s ability to generate recurring revenue from its network.Currently, the company says it has 6,944 charging stations in its network. An internal map of Blink’s public fleet lists about 3,700 stations available in the U.S. By contrast, ChargePoint boasts a global public and private charging network that’s more than 15 times larger.Unlike some of its competitors, Blink’s revenue model hinges in part on driving up utilization rates, which for now remain in the “low-single-digits,” too scant to generate significant revenue, Farkas said during a November earnings call. He told Bloomberg that use will increase as EVs become more popular.For most chargers in operation now, utilization probably must reach 10%-15% to break even, although profitability depends on many other factors such as a company’s business model, electricity rates and capital costs, according to BloombergNEF Senior Associate Ryan Fisher.Blink was an early market leader among charging companies but has lost its lead and now controls about 4% of the sector in Level 2 public charging, said Nick Nigro, founder of Atlas Public Policy, an electric car consulting and policy firm.Blink has also acknowledged “material weaknesses” over its financial reporting, disclosed in U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filings dating back to 2011. The company says it has hired an accounting consultant to review its controls and is making necessary changes.Origin StoryBlink’s colorful origin story has been a prime target of short-sellers. It traces back to 2006 when it formed as shell company New Image Concepts Inc. to provide “top-drawer” personal consulting services related to grooming, wardrobe and entertainment, according to an SEC filing.In December 2009, the company entered a share exchange agreement with Car Charging Inc. Farkas joined the company as CEO in 2010, after working as a stockbroker and investing in companies including Skyway Communications Holding Corp., which the SEC deemed a “pump-and-dump scheme” during the years Farkas held shares. (Farkas said he was a passive investor, was unaware of any misdeeds and “had no involvement in any capacity in the activities of Skyway.”)In 2013, Farkas oversaw Car Charging’s $3.3 million purchase of bankrupt Ecotality, which had received more than $100 million in U.S. Department of Energy grants to install chargers nationwide. The company later changed its name to Blink.Since then, Blink has been plagued by executive turnover, with three of five board members departing between November 2018 and November 2019. The company has had two chief financial officers and three chief operating officers since 2017. One former COO, James Christodoulou, was fired in March 2020. He sued the company, accusing it of potential securities violations, and reached a settlement with Blink, which denied any wrongdoing, for $400,000 in October.Financier Justin Keener, a one-time major Blink shareholder whose capital assisted the company’s 2018 Nasdaq listing, and the company he operated were charged last year for failing to register as a securities dealer while allegedly selling billions of penny-stock shares unrelated to Blink. He said he has since divested from Blink and now owns “a relatively small number of common shares” as a result of a settlement of a warrant dispute with the company. Keener denies the SEC allegations.Farkas told Bloomberg he has cut all ties to Keener, was unaware of any investigations going on while they worked together and has no knowledge of any wrongdoing by Keener.The surging stock has brought a windfall to Farkas, Blink’s largest shareholder. On Jan. 12, after shares rallied to records, he sold $22 million of stock, according to Bloomberg data. Farkas’s total compensation, including stock awards, totaled $6.5 million from 2016 to 2019, equivalent to more than half the company’s revenue. Included in his 2018 compensation were $394,466 in commissions to Farkas Group Inc., a third-party entity he controlled that Blink hired to install chargers.Farkas said his compensation is justified given that he had personally invested in the company’s formation and had for many years received shares in lieu of salary.More recently, Blink board member Donald Engel followed the CEO’s lead.He sold more than $18 million of shares during the past two weeks.(Updates share price in 15th paragraph and adds BNEF chart after 19th.)For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.comSubscribe now to stay ahead with the most trusted business news source.©2021 Bloomberg L.P.

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Tesla CEO Elon Musk puts up promised $100 million toward carbon capture through XPRIZE

Tesla CEO Elon Musk is following through with his promise to offer $100 million for the best carbon capture technology through a new XPRIZE challenge.

Carbon capture, which is also called “carbon capture and storage” (CCS), are processes that involve capturing carbon dioxide (CO2) at the source of emission and sequestrating in order for it to not leak into the air.

It also sometimes involves technologies to use the carbon for other purposes.

The concept has been suggested as a potential solution to slow down climate change by reducing the amount of carbon dioxide emitted in the atmosphere or even reversing it in the future.

However, current carbon capture technologies have often proven inefficient and add cost to energy production – making it uncompetitive without carbon prices. In fact, the only carbon capture plant in the US just closed.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk said last month that he would donate $100 million to help develop the best carbon capture technology.

The competition will be through XPRIZE

XPRIZE, a nonprofit organization that designs and hosts public competitions intended to encourage technological development to benefit humanity, is going to organize the competition.

They confirmed that the $100 million in prizes donated by Musk result the biggest purses yet:

XPRIZE Carbon Removal is aimed at tackling the biggest threat facing humanity — fighting climate change and rebalancing Earth’s carbon cycle. Funded by Elon Musk and the Musk Foundation, this $100M competition is the largest incentive prize in history, an extraordinary milestone.

The full details of the competition will not be revealed until Earth Day, April 22, 2021, but they still released some broader guidelines.

They wrote on a new webpage for the contest:

To win the competition, teams must demonstrate a rigorous, validated scale model of their carbon removal solution, and further must demonstrate to a team of judges the ability of their solution to economically scale to gigaton levels. The objective of this XPRIZE is to inspire and help scale efficient solutions to collectively achieve the 10 gigaton per year carbon removal target by 2050, to help fight climate change and restore the Earth’s carbon balance.

Musk commented on the competition announcement:

We want teams to build real systems that can make a measurable impact at a gigaton level. Whatever it takes. Time is the essence.

As usual, XPRIZE tries to give out the prizes in the most optimal way to help develop as much useful technology as possible.

The contest will last up to four years, but after 18 months, 15 finalists will received $1 million each to kickstart their operating budget to deliver a full-scale demonstration of their carbon capture technology.

At the end, a grand prize winner will receive $50 million with the second and third places receiving $20 million and $10 million, respectively.

Also, 25 students will receive $200,000 scholarships.

FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.


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Elon Musk sent Dogecoin soaring last week. Here are 6 times the Tesla boss has moved markets, from GameStop to Sandstorm.

From GameStop to obscure gold miners, Tesla boss Elon Musk can move markets

Move over Warren Buffet, a new market sage has the ear of investors. At least, investors interested in buying joke cryptocurrencies.

That’s right: Elon Musk. A tweet to his 45 million Twitter followers sent “meme” cryptocurrency Dogecoin soaring on Thursday.

The Tesla boss and SpaceX founder was a vocal supporter of the Reddit crowd during the GameStop saga, and one word of his can send investors piling into a company’s stock.

Where does Musk’s market-moving power come from? He is a deeply attractive figure to many amateur investors, who see him as a genius maverick whose electric-car company Tesla has defied Wall Street naysayers.

On top of that, people can trade the savings they’ve built up during lockdown on commission-free apps such as Robinhood. So why not follow where Musk leads?

Neil Wilson, chief market analyst at UK trading platform Markets.com, told Insider he thinks it’s “worrying in some ways that people’s financial interests are at the whim of his tweets – but it’s up to them if they want to be in those assets.”

Good or bad, investors are increasingly aware of Musk’s tweets. Here are 6 times he’s moved markets.

1. Elon Musk sent Dogecoin soaring 60% in minutes with a tweet

On Thursday, cryptocurrency Dogecoin soared as much as 59% in moments.

Why? Because Elon Musk returned to Twitter after a two-day absence to post a picture based on the movie Lion King which showed him holding up Doge, the meme Shiba Inu dog upon which Dogecoin is based.

The digital currency touched as high as $0.0579 on Thursday, although this was some way from the all-time high of $0.0792 reached in January. As of Friday morning, Dogecoin was down around 11% to $0.0457.

Read More: Investors are flocking to trade Dogecoin and other hot digital tokens on Voyager. Its CEO says Bitcoin will hit $100,000 this year

2. Musk helped power the GameStop frenzy

One of Musk’s most high-profile interventions in the markets came at the end of January, when he waded into the day-trading frenzy that sent GameStop shares soaring and battered hedge funds.

On January 26 after markets closed, and as interest in GameStop shares picked up among day traders on social network website Reddit, Musk simply tweeted “Gamestonk!!” with a link to the Reddit forum Wall Street Bets.

The next day, GameStop’s shares rocketed as much as 157% and closed 135% higher, with Wall Street Bets members widely discussing Musk’s tweet. GameStop tumbled a week later, however, to $70.15 on Friday.

The Wall Street Journal reported that one hedge fund who had bet on GameStop decided to get out after Musk’s tweet. Senvest Management ended up making $700 million.

3. The Tesla chief sent investors piling into the wrong Signal

One of the more bizarre examples of Musk’s market-moving power saw investors pile into a firm called Signal after the SpaceX boss tweeted about it. The only problem was, it was the wrong Signal.

Shares of Signal Advance, a small medical technology company, soared more than 11,000% to as high as $70.85 from $0.60 before Musk’s tweet.

Investors seemed to have confused Signal Advance with the encrypted messaging platform that Musk praised in a two-word message: “Use Signal.”

Read More: A fund manager who’s beaten 97% of his peers over the past 5 years shares 6 of the stocks he’s most bullish on as Biden takes a friendlier stance toward cannabis and electric vehicles

Dogecoin is a cryptocurrency based on the Doge meme, started seemingly as a joke

4. He caused Bitcoin to spike with a hashtag

Bitcoin is a big market, with a capitalization of more than $600 billion. But Musk sent the price of each coin soaring more than 15% at the end of January by simply adding the word “#bitcoin” to his Twitter profile.

The Bitcoin price spiked to as high as $38,406 on January 29, having spent most of the week in a range between $31,000 and $33,000.

Edward Moya, senior market analyst at currency platform Oanda, said in an note: “Bitcoin got lost in the GameStop mania and Musk’s tweet brought cryptos back into the limelight.”

Bitcoin was up around 3% on Friday morning to $38,103.

5. Arts-and-craft retailer Etsy got caught up in the Musk effect

Etsy’s shares jumped as much as 8% on January 26, although they closed lower.

What was behind the spike? Why, Elon Musk saying he had bought a “hand knit wool Marvin the Martian” helmet for his dog, of course.

His satisfaction with his purchase caused the Tesla chief to tweet “I kinda love Etsy” and for the company’s share price to promptly rally in early trading.

Read More: A top-ranked manager at a firm that handles $50 billion in wealth told us 4 ways investors can smartly play day-trading favorites like GameStop without risking it all

6. Musk’s techno tweet boosts obscure gold miner

It’s perhaps the strangest of Musk’s market-moving moments. In his return to Twitter last week, he said “Sandstorm is a masterpiece”, likely referring to the hit 2000 song by Darude.

Day traders went searching for meaning in the stock market, sending shares in Sandstorm Gold – a $1.3 billion Canadian gold miner –  soaring as much as 55% in pre-market trading.

The rally was short-lived, however, with the stock down 1% just before normal trading opened.



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Tesla Model Y Compared To Ford Mustang Mach-E

The guys over at Daily Motor got hold of a Ford Mustang Mach-E and put together a video review, comparing it to their own Tesla Model Y.

These two electric vehicles are direct, head to head competitors and will undoubtedly be cross-shopped by many consumers looking for an all-electric crossover. The Model Y is their own personal vehicle, and they admit that their familiarity may influence their initial opinions.

However, they also point out that they come from a diehard Ford family, and really want the Mustang Mach-E to be a great EV, and enjoy much success. 

They guys point out the Tesla is much more efficient and also seems more planted on the road. The lift-off regenerative braking is also stronger on the Model Y but the Mach-E does have a blended braking system to add regen when the friction brake pedal is depressed, and the Model Y doesn’t have blended brakes, only lift-off regen. 

They also point out that they believe the Model Y’s center screen layout is more easily navigated. However, they own the Model Y and have only spent a short time in the Mach-E so it’s possible that they are just more familiar with the Model Y so the user interface seems easier to navigate.

The available cargo space is also an area where the Tesla has the advantage. The Model Y has more cargo space, 68 cu ft compared to the Mach-E’s 60 cu ft. The Model Y also has wider tires than the Mach-E which should provide better grip (255s for the Model Y compared to the Mach-E’s 225s).

Charlie actually preferred the driving dynamics of the Mach-E over the Model Y and Nathan preferred the Model Y. However, when it came to the overall package, both guys said they would choose the Model Y, but they left the door open to change their opinion once they have a Mach-E for a longer period for a more thorough review.

So check out the entire video and let us know if you agree with their initial assessment. As always, please leave your thoughts in the comment section below.  

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Tesla is in decline, SUVs are king, and more insights from the world’s largest electric-vehicle market

Europe overtook China in 2020 to become the world’s largest market for electric vehicles, amid a pedal-to-the-metal push to increase EV adoption from governments and supercharged demand from consumers.

The registrations of new electric vehicles topped 1.33 million in the key European markets last year, compared with 1.25 million in China, according to a report based on public data by automotive analyst Matthias Schmidt.

The 18 markets include the European Union states — minus 13 countries in Central and Eastern Europe — as well as the U.K., Norway, Iceland, and Switzerland.

And growth will only continue, according to Schmidt, who publishes the European Electric Car Report. He projects that electric vehicles’ share of the European car market will rise from 12.4% in 2020 to 15.5% in 2021 — that is 1.91 million vehicles out of a total of 12.3 million, and an increase of 572,000 from 2020.

Key trends have emerged as Europe races to become the most important region for EVs, highlighted in the report that Schmidt shared with MarketWatch.

Among them are that the Renault Zoe is now the most popular electric vehicle in Europe, overtaking Tesla’s Model 3, which took the top spot in 2019. In fact, Tesla’s success in Europe has declined across the board over the last year, with the U.S. company delivering 97,791 cars across the continent in 2020, down from 109,467 in 2019.

Here’s what you should know:

SUVs are leading the growth

When you think of environmentally-friendly vehicles, sport-utility vehicles and crossovers probably don’t spring to mind. But this class is by far the most popular type of battery-electric vehicle in Europe, representing 27% of all registrations in 2020 and 29% in December alone.

Hyundai
005380,
+0.42%
and Kia
000270,
-1.22%
led the pack, making up 39% of battery-electric SUV and crossover volumes in 2020.

SUVs and crossovers are even more popular with hybrid buyers — accounting for 53% of plug-in hybrid electric-vehicle volumes last year.

Luxury buyers prefer hybrids

When it comes to hybrids, better is best. Premium brands made up 58% of all plug-in hybrid electric-vehicles in 2020.

Many of those cars were supplied by the German automotive giants: Volkswagen Group
VOW,
-0.40%,
which owns Audi and Porsche, Mercedes-Benz owner Daimler
DAI,
+0.46%,
and BMW
BMW,
-0.19%.

There is a coming wave from China

As Chinese car makers increase efforts to meet market demand at home and abroad, they are looking at Europe.

The volume of electric vehicles in Europe that were made by Chinese companies grew 1290% from 2019 to 2020, to 23,800 units. Much of that momentum came only recently — half of those cars arrived in the final three months of the year.

As Europeans scrambled to buy electric vehicles, the flow of cars from China also included Teslas. In December, 20% of all Tesla
TSLA,
+5.83%
models registered in Austria were manufactured in China.

Also read: Audi is betting on the luxury market in a new electric-vehicle venture with China’s oldest car maker

Government action is speeding up EV adoption

European car makers are being pushed to manufacture more electric vehicles by the threat of hundreds of millions of euros in fines from the European Union over binding emissions targets. 

Phased in through 2020, and continuing into 2021, the fleetwide average emission target for new cars must be 95 grams carbon dioxide per kilometer, which is around 4.1 liters of gasoline per 100 kilometers.

In the wake of the post-Brexit trading agreement, the U.K. government said that the country’s car makers face emissions targets “at least as ambitious” as in the EU.

EV adoption is being pushed on both sides of the market, with governments stimulating demand by providing generous incentives for buyers to trade in their gas guzzlers.

In Germany, buyers can save up to €9,000 ($10,940) on purchases of new electric vehicles. France offered incentives of up to €7,000 in 2020, but will trim that down to €6,000 in 2021. 

Regulation could hurt some bottom lines in the short-term

Volkswagen Group confirmed last week that it had not met the EU’s emissions targets for 2020, meaning that the company is on the hook for more than €100 million in fines.

Others could face the same fate, though rivals Daimler, BMW, Renault
RNO,
-0.58%,
and Peugeot (now part of Stellantis
STLA,
+1.05%
) all say they met their targets.

“Despite very ambitious efforts in electrification, it has not been possible to meet the set fleet target in full. But Volkswagen is clearly well on its way,” said Rebecca Harms, a member of the independent Volkswagen Sustainability Council.

“The key to success will be to give a greater role to smaller, efficient and affordable models in the electrification rollout.”

It is unclear how easy that will be in 2021. The COVID-19 pandemic contributed to the fewest passenger-car registrations in Europe since 1985 and, according to Schmidt, this allowed a number of car makers to meet emissions targets.

Also read: Car makers put the pedal to the metal on electric vehicles in 2020, with sales surging in one key region where Tesla lost market share

Tesla is losing dominance

Tesla comfortably topped the European EV charts in 2019. It delivered more than 109,000 vehicles that year, making up 31% of the region’s battery electric-vehicle market. 

But the tide turned in 2020, with Tesla dropping behind both the brands of Volkswagen Group, which had 24% market share, and the Renault–Nissan–Mitsubishi Alliance, with 19% market share. Last year, Tesla delivered nearly 98,000 vehicles and made up just 13% of the European market.

According to Schmidt, it was the introduction of emissions targets, and the specter of massive fines, that has accelerated European car makers’ battle against Tesla for dominance.

See also: Electric-car sales jump to record 54% market share in Norway in 2020 but Tesla loses top spot

“With 2021 getting even tougher — thanks to the phase-in year ending — Tesla will come under even more intense competition,” Schmidt said. “Come 2025 when the targets increase again, Tesla will certainly be playing against fully-fit opponents and will potentially struggle.”

However, Schmidt does note in his market outlook for 2021 that the opening of Tesla’s factory in Germany, expected to start production in the second half, is likely to double regional volumes next year.



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Spin? Tesla website hid normal steering wheel option to bizarre yoke

Tesla’s newest model announcements may have come with a side of clickbait.

When the updated Model S and X were revealed last week, their standout feature was a yoke-style steering wheel bereft of control stalks. The unusual design had previously been shown on several Tesla prototypes, but never used in a production model. Needless to say, it go plenty of attention in the automotive press.

Tesla’s website says it provides “The ultimate focus on driving: no stalks, no shifting. Model S is the best car to drive, and the best car do be driven in.”

Elon Musk elaborated that the cars can “guess” what direction you want to go, and that the transmission selector has been moved to the central touchscreen display for when you absolutely need to use it. The vehicles are also offered with Tesla’s optional Full Self-Driving Capability, which currently offer a certain level of active driving assistance, but will eventually be capable of full autonomous, according to Musk.

The “wheel” has garnered interest from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, which said it was reaching out to Tesla for more information.

250 MPH TESLA ROADSTER DELAYED TO 2022

However, it may not be the only one available. By modifying the source code of an image of the interior from the Tesla consumer website, automotive outlet The Drive discovered that an alternate one was hidden on the website that depicted it with a traditional round wheel.

It still doesn’t have any stalks, and the buttons on the spokes, which apparently control the turn signals, horn and lights, appear the same as those on the yoke.

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Following the reporting on its discovery, the image was completely deleted by Tesla, which has not commented on its reveal. Currently, there is no mention of a steering wheel on the reservation page, which advertises that the first deliveries will begin in March, although Musk said production is already underway and that shipments will start in February.

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Buy the Tesla Dip? This 5-Star Investing Guru Just Did

Shares of Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) climbed more than 700% in 2020. However, that has some people wondering whether the stock isn’t due for a downturn. Indeed, those concerns took shape last week, as Tesla’s stock fell steadily to drop below the $800 per share level by Friday.

For many who have a big profit on a stock position, a decline might prompt some modest profit-taking or even a full-scale liquidation of their holdings. But for ace investor Cathie Wood at ARK Invest, the dip in Tesla was an opportunity to buy — and buy she did, without hesitation.

Image source: Tesla.

Sell high, buy low

Wood has been a big fan of Tesla for a long time. Several of her active exchange-traded funds  have substantial holdings in the stock. Specifically, the ARK Innovation ETF (NYSEMKT:ARKK) and the ARK Next Generation Internet (NYSEMKT:ARKW) both have almost 10% of their assets invested in the electric automaker.

Last week, the two ARK ETFs trimmed their positions in Tesla. Some might have concluded from just watching that single week of activity that Wood might be losing her confidence in the stock.

But Wood reversed course on Jan. 29, taking advantage of the share price decline to buy back some of the shares she had sold the previous week. ARK Innovation bought more than 85,500 shares of Tesla on Friday, representing about 0.3% of the fund’s total assets. ARK Next Generation Internet made a similarly sized buy in proportion to the smaller size of the fund, picking up almost 23,500 shares.

How much money did ARK Invest make?

With active ETFs, we don’t get real-time information about the purchases and sales that fund managers make. However, the funds are required to give their positions each day, and ARK Invest reveals the exact number of shares involved in each purchase or sale.

However, you can estimate the amount of the benefit to the fund that Wood’s transactions produced. Tesla traded at $845 on Jan. 19 and $850 on Jan. 20, the days on which the ETFs sold Tesla shares. With Tesla closing Jan. 29 at $794, the fund could have saved $51 per share on the 85,500 shares ARK Innovation bought. ARK Next Generation Internet sold only 10,500 shares last week, but it could’ve saved $56 per share on the rebuy. Do the math and that adds up to $4.36 million for ARK Innovation and $588,000 for ARK Next Generation Internet.

The benefits of rebalancing

Interestingly, what Wood did is very similar to what most financial advisors recommend that people do with their overall investing portfolios. Essentially, Wood did a short-term rebalance. She sold Tesla shares when the percentage of the ETF portfolio got higher than she wanted. But when that percentage subsequently got too low, the funds bought shares to get back into balance.

You can see the same kinds of gains with broader rebalancing of your stock, bond, and cash positions. In years when stocks rise, selling a small portion at high prices to shift into lower-price assets reduces your risk level and cashes in on some profits. If the stock market goes down in a subsequent year, then rebalancing has you buy shares on the cheap.

What’s next for Tesla?

Tesla inspires a lot of controversy, and there’s no end in sight for that. Some still argue that Tesla’s profits are artificially inflated by regulatory credits, masking the inherent weakness in its business. Others point to the immense optionality in Tesla’s business, as well as the strong demand for its vehicles.

As for Wood, her prowess is in large part due to her investments in Tesla, but the automaker isn’t the only stock that’s performed well for her. Both ARK Innovator and ARK Next Generation Internet have earned five-star ratings from Morningstar, and the list of other holdings looks like a who’s-who among rising giants of their respective fields.

Tesla shares have risen so much that shareholders need to expect pullbacks, and they could be much larger than what we saw last week. Yet for long-term investors who see value in the vision of CEO Elon Musk and the technology that Tesla has produced, those short-term fluctuations are primarily an opportunity to pick up shares slightly more cheaply.



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I’d buy the Tesla Cybertruck with Bitcoin

Tim Draper, the billionaire Bitcoin (BTC) investor who also invested early in Tesla, reacted to the company’s CEO and world’s richest man, Elon Musk, adding #Bitcoin to his Twitter bio to join the likes of Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey and Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian.

Draper, who holds around 30,000 BTC according to reports, told Musk that he would like to pay for the Tesla cybertruck with BTC while promoting his Bitcoin payment processor portfolio company OpenNode. He said:

“Hi Elon Musk, I would like to buy a Tesla cybertruck. Although I personally would rather keep my own #bitcoin, you can accept #bitcoin through our Draper VC company OpenNode.”

Why now?

On Jan. 29, Bitcoin proceeded to rally by 14% in merely 30 minutes shortly after Elon Musk’s Bitcoin support began circulating on social media. 

Many speculated that Musk could have been the high-net-worth investor behind the massive Bitcoin accumulation on Coinbase in the past week.

In the past several days, the premium on Coinbase skyrocketed to around $200, compared to Binance. This usually indicates significant buying activity from U.S. investors.

However, Musk did not follow up on the bio change, and overnight, the rally reversed. Bitcoin rose from $33,000 to over $38,000, and dropped back down to $33,000.

Draper likely tweeted at Musk due the interest in Bitcoin from Musk and the positive market sentiment around BTC.

In a recent interview with CNBC, Draper said that he is actually buying more Bitcoin. Draper also said that he does not intend to sell BTC in the future, expressing his strong belief in Bitcoin as a “currency of the future.” He said:

“I’m actually just buying more [Bitcoin]… I have no interest in ever selling my #Bitcoin for dollars. Why would I take the currency of the future and sell it for the currency of the past?”

On-chain data shows that Draper isn’t the only one focused on long term gains.  In fact, “HODLing” activity, which indicates the intent of Bitcoin investors to hold BTC for a long time, is at record highs.

Bitcoin 1-year HODL wave. Source: Lookintobitcoin

Will Bitcoin ever be used as a currency?

Bitcoin is increasingly becoming considered as a store of value and an alternative to gold as a safe-haven asset. In recent months, though, the correlation and inverse correlation between Bitcoin, gold and stocks have been decreasing. 

Bitcoin correlation vs. S&P500,VIX, DXY, Gold. Source: Digital Assets Data

In addition to the massive price gains, the fear of inflation and the large injection of liquidity by central banks have stirred massive interest among institutional and high-net-worth investors.

But while accepting BTC is becoming increasingly common, the question remains whether Bitcoin would ever be used as a currency and a medium of exchange like the dollar today.

Ironically, when the price of Bitcoin is in a clear uptrend, investors are less likely to sell or spend their BTC. Draper himself is suggesting that he will probably pay the $40,000 for the Cybertruck with dollars rather than the “currency of the future.”

However, if Bitcoin price stabilizes in the future at a high enough price level and sees lower volatility, then BTC could become more compelling for everyday payments.

Meanwhile, as the network gains more users and must scale, the Bitcoin blockchain network may ultimately become inefficient to use for everyday payments on the first layer. 

At that point, second-layer scaling solutions, like Lightning Network and sidechains like Liquid, for example, may become the blockchain “apps” for processing small payments instantly. Such interoperable platforms will likely have their own tradeoffs with varying degrees of trustlessness, privacy and decentralization.



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