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  Business   Companies  03 Aug 2018  Tesla shares spike, dealing short-sellers a USD 1.7 billion loss

Tesla shares spike, dealing short-sellers a USD 1.7 billion loss

REUTERS
Published : Aug 3, 2018, 10:15 am IST
Updated : Aug 3, 2018, 10:15 am IST

Tesla shares rallied $48.70 to $349.54 a day after the manufacturer said it would produce its new Model 3 sedan at a profit.

Tesla is the fourth-worst performing US short bet, and short-sellers have lost $4.70 billion on a net basis over that period.
 Tesla is the fourth-worst performing US short bet, and short-sellers have lost $4.70 billion on a net basis over that period.

New York: Tesla Inc shares soared 16 per cent on Thursday, a day after the electric car maker’s better-than-expected quarterly report, and financial analytics firm S3 Partners said short-sellers were slammed with $1.7 billion in paper losses on the day.

S3 said the day’s losses pushed the aggregate year-to-date performance of short-sellers in Tesla into the red. Short-sellers aim to profit by selling borrowed shares, hoping to buy them back later at a lower price. Tesla is the most shorted US stock.

Until Wednesday, Tesla short-sellers had, on paper, been up $276 million for the year. Following Thursday’s stock surge, they now have losses of $1.4 billion for the year, S3 data showed.

“We are not seeing a large amount of buy to covers yet,” said Ihor Dusaniwsky, head of research at S3 in New York, referring to traders buying shares to close out an existing short position.

“With such a large price move on the open, most short-sellers that are looking to cover are waiting for a retracement before placing buy-to-cover orders,” he said.

Tesla shares rallied $48.70 to $349.54 a day after the manufacturer said it would produce its new Model 3 sedan at a profit, following several recent weeks in which output had stabilized.

The update buoyed hopes that the company led by Elon Musk will stanch its losses.

Tesla’s rapid cash burn and struggles at turning a profit have made it a favourite target for shorts, including big names such as Jim Chanos, head of Kynikos Associates, and billionaire hedge fund manager David Einhorn’s Greenlight Capital fund.

Since the beginning of 2016, Tesla is the fourth-worst performing US short bet, and short-sellers have lost $4.70 billion on a net basis over that period, according to S3 data.

Tags: tesla, shares, profit, revenue
Location: United States, New York, New York