Tesla is reminiscent of the dot-com bubble—many believe there is an overvaluation, but those who try to short the stock get burned.
The monthly global bubble status report from the Financial Crisis Observatory, which is put together by ETH Zurich’s Department of Management, Technology and Economics as well as Systematic Investment Management, has devoted a special section to the electric-vehicle producer.
“Weak fundamentals, high valuation and lots of exciting good news: it is a typical dot-com-like bubble and very dangerous for short sellers,” the report says, comparing the Tesla situation to Julian Robertson’s bet against technology stocks in 2000.
Tesla shares, even after a bit of a pullback, have still stormed 79% higher in 2020.
“In the short term, the speculative sentiment pumped up Tesla’s market cap to more than $160 billion, while in the long term, the green energy and electrical automobile tides are forming. Thus, a technical correction is inevitable. When a correction will be coming, the sky-high valuation of Tesla (lack of reasonable fundamentals to justify the price) will become the last dagger to sting the foam,” the report says.
The report also sounded a dark note on the global economy. “Rising stock prices such as Tesla is no indication of increased wealth in absence of real economic growth. Rising stock prices are an indication of an erosion of purchasing power of the currency,” the report said. “The middle class is already facing recession-like pressure. The majority of people continue to become poorer as the cost of living outpaces any real wage growth. Most people are already living in recession even when stocks are going up, their medical, college costs and taxes are going up.”
This article originally appeared on MarketWatch.