Carpet_pissr wrote:To me, this bolded part is the most important consideration - is F a good investment TODAY (irrespective, IMO, of whether or not they are an EV leader).
Agreed. I think the issue for me is I feel there's going to come a point at which EVs stop slowly growing and suddenly 'grow up.' At that point I don't think it's going to be a slow decline for those not on board, but a sudden drop. I'm probably wrong about this. But that's why I wouldn't want to be left holding the bag of an individual ICE manufacturer stock at that point.
Incidentally this is one of the reasons I asked earlier who has driven a full-on EV. It's really one of those things you have to experience to 'get,' or at least it was for me. Go drive a Tesla (seriously; go do it) and then jump back into an ICE. There's just no comparison, and this holds (for me) for the driving experience even in a more pedestrian EV like my Leaf. The 0-60 ain't spectacular, but the silent drive, instant torque at any speed, 100% charge every morning, no fumes, always heated/cooled to a comfortable level before I get into the car, etc are things that an ICE vehicle can never replicate, because physics. That instant torque is under-rated--even with a relatively tiny 80 kW motor (vs 225-450 kW in a Tesla), the Leaf is far more fun to drive in traffic than our 400 hp Volvo. It's just a different class of experience, irrespective of whether it's a $70k Tesla or a $27k Leaf.
You compare Tesla to Ford as if they are comparable, but they are not really playing in the same space. My comment about ROW was not to say there won't be Tesla (or EV) sales there, but that many MANY MAAAAAAAANY people (India, China, etc.), will be on ICE's for years, if not decades to come, just due to economics and access. Point being, it will likely be Tesla AND F, not Tesla OR F, if you know what I mean? (or substitute GM)
That's true--they're different on many levels. F sells booku more vehicles, while Tesla is in the energy space. I wouldn't pin my hopes and dreams on China and India continuing to ICE things along, though. China in particular looks like they may go far more all-in on EVs than the US does. But your point still stands--there will be places that will buy up cheap ICE vehicles for quite some time to come even if the 'big players' start to transition to EVs.
Also, I could be wrong (and ironically, I work for a company that has all this data, so I could find out if I wanted to dig), but I doubt there are a significant number of people in both the "Typical Ford clients" and "Typical Tesla clients" sets.
This is true, but by the end of this year will be significantly less true. The typical Model 3 reservation holder is a Toyota owner. Tesla's progress thus far has been in the luxury space where there aren't likely a ton of Ford owners, but it's also been the case for quite some time that the typical Model S owner isn't always coming from a 7 series--tons of folks stretching up from a Prius or other 'eco' vehicle.
To answer the question, though...my answer today is: "I'm not sure" I've been holding for a long time, and am certainly in the black just from the healthy dividend, but quarter after quarter after quarter of crappy new sales numbers is not very encouraging to me as an investor. Maybe I shift my F investment dollars into my existing GM...they certainly seem to be fixing their previous issues better than F is, and is being reflected in their stock price.
Fair answer! And somewhat similar to me if for different reasons. I've been holding TSLA since 2013, and will continue to do so at least through the initial stages of the Model 3 ramp as I think the risk/reward ratio is favorable given that I won't lose sleep if it drops a decent amount from here to there. But were I looking at TSLA today from the sidelines, it'd be a much harder sell for me to buy in.