Tesla Stock Went Down Again for a New Reason. Here’s Where It’s Going.

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Tesla stock tends to rise faster than the Nasdaq when the index is going up, but it falls faster when the benchmark declines.


Philippe Lopez/AFP via Getty Images

Shares of EV leader

Tesla

have taken a beating for the past couple of weeks, for reasons related both to the company and to what is happening in financial markets. But a separate factor pushed them down on Friday.

Tesla (ticker: TSLA) stock dropped 1.7% to $215.49, while the


S&P 500

was flat and the


Nasdaq Composite

was down 0.2%. The loss marked the sixth consecutive drop for Tesla stock and the 13th in the past 14 trading sessions.

The market deserves some of the blame. Coming into Friday trading, the Nasdaq was off about 7% for the month, and Tesla stock tends to be more volatile than the index. It rises faster when things are good and falls harder when conditions worsen.

Elon Musk deserves some blame, too. On Tesla’s second-quarter earnings conference call in July, Musk reiterated his stance that growth in sales volume was more important than pricing for Tesla. That stoked fears of more price cuts and profit-margin erosion.

After cutting prices aggressively to start 2023, Tesla reported operating profit margins of just over 10% in the first half of 2023, down from about 17% in the first half of 2022.

“For those who stubbornly cling to the notion that Tesla price cuts are somehow good for Tesla valuation, look at Tesla stock versus peers since Tesla’s July 19 conf call,” wrote

Future Fund Active ETF

(FFND) co-founder, and Tesla shareholder, Gary Black in a Thursday tweet.

Tesla stock has dropped roughly 25% since then. Other large tech stocks are down about 3% on average over the same span.

General Motors

(GM),

Ford Motor

(F), and

Stellantis

(STLA) shares have fallen by an average of roughly 12%.

Events in China appear to be behind Tesla’s drop. The Chinese real estate company China

Evergrande

filed for bankruptcy protection in the U.S. on Thursday, sending Chinese stock indexes lower. The


Shanghai Composite

dropped 1%, while Hong Kong’s


Hang Seng

fell 2.1%.

The strength of China’s economy matters because China is the world’s largest market for new cars and new EVs. Tesla is the second-largest EV maker in China behind

BYD

(1211. Hong Kong). BYD stock dropped 3.8% in overseas trading on Friday.

If there is good news for investors after the decline, it’s that Tesla stock is nearing some technical support. After breaking $240 a share “the zone between the February and March highs would be the next potential stopping point,” says technical stock market analyst and CappThesis founder Frank Cappelleri. That’s $208 to $218 a share.

“Next support…is about $200 based on a 50% retracement of the year-to-date uptrend,” says Fairlead Strategies founder and market technician Katie Stockton. Support “is bolstered by the 200-day moving average which is near $197 and rising gradually.”

Cappelleri and Stockton aren’t making fundamental calls on Tesla stock. They use stock charts to get a sense of where things will go over the short and medium terms. Charts can tell investors a lot about where investors have bought and sold shares in the past and when too much good or bad news is reflected in stock prices.

Cappelleri’s support is right where Tesla stock is trading. If he is correct, Tesla stock doesn’t have much further to fall.

Through Friday trading, Tesla stock was still up about 75% so far this year.

Write to Al Root at [email protected]

Source: https://www.barrons.com/articles/tesla-stock-down-china-support-65832d7d?siteid=yhoof2&yptr=yahoo