Boiler Room: The Official Stock Market Discussion

FreshFromATL

Self Made
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
19,678
Reputation
2,631
Daps
43,801
Reppin
ATL
Lucid is trading right now at 40x 2022 projected revenue. Tesla is trading at 15X average estimated 2022 revenue. Lucid is bad right now as it's more expensive than Tesla. Rivian however is insane. It's $20 billion away from being worth more than Ford and GM combined. At this point it's a game of musical chairs for who the bag holders will be when the music stops. It's not an investment right now it's just gambling. It will be several years before that company is putting up numbers that justify what it cost right now.

I know it's easy to get swept up in irrational behavior of others and watch a share price continue to climb but valuation matters and when all the insanity subsides this thing is gonna freefall back to earth.

I agree near-term but long-term, but how you think Ford/GM gonna make it in a post clean energy world? You honestly think legacy companies that have only ever focused on the combustion engine can all of a sudden switch gears and become battery and tech companies at scale easily? :usure:

I expect to see hella partnerships between legacy automakers (Ford/GM/Volkswagen etc.) and the likes of Lucid/Tesla/Rivian, etc. Without it, those legacy companies going out like Blockbuster refusing to partner with Netflix.
 

Tunez

Lloyd Banks Stan
Supporter
Joined
Jun 29, 2013
Messages
43,680
Reputation
6,777
Daps
76,609
Reppin
Southside, 2gz Up
  • Ford owns about 12% of the company through investments that started in 2019 as well as convertible notes, according to public filings by Rivian.
  • Based on Rivian's closing price of $100.73 a share Wednesday following its Nasdaq debut, Ford's roughly 102 million shares of the company are worth about $10.3 billion.
  • Ford purchased the shares for an aggregate of $820 million, according to public documents.
 

GoldenGlove

😐😑😶😑😐
Staff member
Supporter
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
59,836
Reputation
5,780
Daps
140,936
I agree, but how you think Ford/GM gonna make it in a post clean energy world? You honestly think legacy companies that have only ever focused on the combustion engine can all of a sudden switch gears and become battery and tech companies at scale easily? :usure:

I expect to see hella partnerships between legacy automakers (Ford/GM/Volkswagen etc.) and the likes of Lucid/Tesla/Rivian, etc. Without it, those legacy companies going out like Blockbuster refusing to partner with Netflix.
Yes. I wouldn't say easily, but easier than a new company starting from 0.

Legacy manufacturers will obviously adapt and have more options at lower prices then Tesla IMO
 

FaTaL

Veteran
Joined
May 2, 2012
Messages
103,207
Reputation
5,105
Daps
206,054
Reppin
NULL
I agree, but how you think Ford/GM gonna make it in a post clean energy world? You honestly think legacy companies that have only ever focused on the combustion engine can all of a sudden switch gears and become battery and tech companies at scale easily? :usure:

I expect to see hella partnerships between legacy automakers (Ford/GM/Volkswagen etc.) and the likes of Lucid/Tesla/Rivian, etc. Without it, those legacy companies going out like Blockbuster refusing to partner with Netflix.

the only advantage they have is having the facilities which the new ev companies don’t have. Creating the technology will be their biggest hurdle, if they haven’t been able to see what is happening they will cease to exist.
 

FreshFromATL

Self Made
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
19,678
Reputation
2,631
Daps
43,801
Reppin
ATL
the only advantage they have is having the facilities which the new ev companies don’t have. Creating the technology will be their biggest hurdle, if they haven’t been able to see what is happening they will cease to exist.

they won’t even have that advantage for much longer.
 

Chrishaune

Veteran
Joined
Jun 28, 2012
Messages
36,517
Reputation
2,546
Daps
89,271
Reppin
Huntsville
  • Ford owns about 12% of the company through investments that started in 2019 as well as convertible notes, according to public filings by Rivian.
  • Based on Rivian's closing price of $100.73 a share Wednesday following its Nasdaq debut, Ford's roughly 102 million shares of the company are worth about $10.3 billion.
  • Ford purchased the shares for an aggregate of $820 million, according to public documents.

So Ford is over $15 billion now and getting closer to $20 billion

:wow: probably going to pay for their whole transition to electric off of this one stock.
 

dora_da_destroyer

Master Baker
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
65,374
Reputation
16,252
Daps
268,554
Reppin
Oakland
I agree near-term but long-term, but how you think Ford/GM gonna make it in a post clean energy world? You honestly think legacy companies that have only ever focused on the combustion engine can all of a sudden switch gears and become battery and tech companies at scale easily? :usure:

I expect to see hella partnerships between legacy automakers (Ford/GM/Volkswagen etc.) and the likes of Lucid/Tesla/Rivian, etc. Without it, those legacy companies going out like Blockbuster refusing to partner with Netflix.
Ford and GM have been making big investments into EV, offering more and more cars, partnering on battery tech, investing in charging, etc. If anything, they will be the winners of this as they have the production capacity and know-how. I see a lot of acquisitions happening in this space as the big auto makers buy these companies to offer an EV brand underneath the parent brand

GM also has cruise, one of the biggest autonomous driving companies
 
Last edited:

winb83

52 Years Young
Supporter
Joined
May 28, 2012
Messages
46,152
Reputation
3,904
Daps
69,909
Reppin
Michigan
I agree near-term but long-term, but how you think Ford/GM gonna make it in a post clean energy world? You honestly think legacy companies that have only ever focused on the combustion engine can all of a sudden switch gears and become battery and tech companies at scale easily? :usure:

I expect to see hella partnerships between legacy automakers (Ford/GM/Volkswagen etc.) and the likes of Lucid/Tesla/Rivian, etc. Without it, those legacy companies going out like Blockbuster refusing to partner with Netflix.
Ford and GM are already transitioning to EVs.

GM has a trailing 12 month net income of $11 billion. GM has gross profits from normal operations. GM is in a better position to transition to and scale an EV business than some of these startups that are starting from nothing. GM has brand goodwill. You really think they're afraid of some EV startup that's not even gonna sell 25K cars total next year and is still struggling to scale properly?
 

dora_da_destroyer

Master Baker
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
65,374
Reputation
16,252
Daps
268,554
Reppin
Oakland
Probably 2 years, they better not miss on their ev trucks
lol @ 2 years, yall just talking. TSLA been in the game over a decade with only 4 factories...stop it

edit...also want to add TSLA first factory was one they bought from Toyota...I toured that factory back in college...it takes a lot to get a full production facility up and running, these new companies gonna need to partner to expand or keep serving a very small niche of high end buyers due to production restraints and low economies of scale which leads to this conundrum of them being severely overpriced for the actual sales they'll be able to achieve in the medium term
 
Last edited:

FreshFromATL

Self Made
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
19,678
Reputation
2,631
Daps
43,801
Reppin
ATL
Ford and GM are already transitioning to EVs.

GM has a trailing 12 month net income of $11 billion. GM has gross profits from normal operations. GM is in a better position to transition to and scale an EV business than some of these startups that are starting from nothing. GM has brand goodwill. You really think they're afraid of some EV startup that's not even gonna sell 25K cars total next year and is still struggling to scale properly?

We shall see because they're definitely on the clock given that new gas cars sells will likely be banned in most places by 2030-2035.
 

winb83

52 Years Young
Supporter
Joined
May 28, 2012
Messages
46,152
Reputation
3,904
Daps
69,909
Reppin
Michigan
We shall see because they're definitely on the clock given that new gas cars sells will likely be banned in most places by 2030-2035.
You saying this as if they aren't going in on transitioning to EVs. They can use their ICE business to fuel the EV transition. They won't have to do anywhere near the level of fundraising the EV startups will. The only issue I see is both companies have an undesirable level of debt but so will those EV startups when all is said and done.
 

dora_da_destroyer

Master Baker
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
65,374
Reputation
16,252
Daps
268,554
Reppin
Oakland
let's act like GM wasn't producing EV's way back in 1996 brehs...the EV1 was some ugly shyt, but they were on it :russ: the big 3 almost died in the financial crisis of 08, after almost dying from displacement by the japanese in the late 80's & 90's....these companies know when and how to respond to ensure survival. they may not be at the forefront of making the market but they quickly adapt to what the market wants. you don't be in business for over 100 years and not know how to pivot.

GM-EV1-b.jpg
 
Top