One MASSIVE thing about Tesla and Afterpay that people forget

Darling growth companies are often derided for bleeding cash. But is that actually true? A fundie offers his thoughts.

| More on:

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More

Tesla Inc (NASDAQ: TSLA) is often cited as the poster child for the irrational exuberance of retail investors.

Notwithstanding the COVID-19 market crash, the stock for the electric car maker has increased 660% times since the start of 2020.

That dizzying ascent has made many people rich. This includes chief executive Elon Musk, who in January briefly overtook Amazon.com Inc (NASDAQ: AMZN) founder Jeff Bezos as the planet's wealthiest person.

Tesla is now worth more than the 8 biggest traditional car makers combined, even though it produces a fraction of the vehicles they do.

Critics say this is the worst example of an overvalued growth stock. Foolhardy retail investors are pumping money into speculative businesses that are just bleeding cash, they say.

The local version of Tesla is Afterpay Ltd (ASX: APT), which jumped 5-fold in price from the start of 2020 to February this year.

So is the criticism of these businesses valid?

A businessman lights up the fifth star in a lineup, indicating positive share price for a top performer

Image source: Getty Images

Tesla's had positive earnings for 3 years

Frazis Capital portfolio manager Michael Frazis pointed out a tidbit that the Tesla critics seem to have missed.

"In the industry, it seems nobody really knows this or really wants to engage with the fact this company's been profitable for a long time," he told clients in a video briefing.

When Frazis says "profitable", he refers to the EBITDA, which has been in the black for the last 3 financial years.

The 2020 financial year saw Tesla generate US$4.3 billion in EBITDA, up 93% on the year before. The car maker even made its first net profit of US$690 million.

Back in 2019, before the massive share price surge, Tesla was an absolute bargain.

"A couple of years ago, this was trading 15 times [enterprise value to] EBITDA. It was basically a value stock!"

The same situation applied to Afterpay when Frazis' fund bought into it back in 2016.

"It was profitable then. A huge cash draw, but it was profitable."

What should growth companies do with all that EBITDA

The growth stocks Frazis favours will put all that positive EBITDA back into the business.

"What we want to see is these companies investing all that profit."

He cited the examples of fintechs Xero Limited (ASX: XRO) and Square Inc (NYSE: SQ) as other businesses where investment back into the business saw their revenues take off.

"In Q1 2015, [Square] spent US$32 million and got US$172 million back in gross profit," said Frazis.

"This is the dynamic we look for. I wouldn't get lost in 'do we care about profitability' – of course we do, but it's beside the point."

Hyperion Asset Management lead portfolio manager Jason Orthman said much the same last month in support of Tesla and Square.

They are actually his fund's largest current holdings.

"Even though those share prices have re-rated upwards as we were buying them over the last 12 months or so, we still believe that they're fundamentally misunderstood and there's a large shift in consumer behaviour going on," Orthman told The Motley Fool.

"So it's still really day one for both Tesla and Square."

Tony Yoo owns shares of AFTERPAY T FPO, Square, and Xero. The Motley Fool Australia's parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. owns shares of and recommends Square and Tesla. The Motley Fool Australia's parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. owns shares of Xero. The Motley Fool Australia owns shares of AFTERPAY T FPO. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Bruce Jackson.

More on Growth Shares

A woman is excited as she reads the latest rumour on her phone.
Growth Shares

Here's why experts rate these ASX 200 growth shares as buys

Healthcare, retail, and lithium... here's why analysts rate these growth shares highly right now.

Read more »

A cool young man walking in a laneway holding a takeaway coffee in one hand and his phone in the other reacts with surprise as he reads the latest news on his mobile phone
Broker Notes

Morgans names the best ASX 200 growth shares to buy in March

These growth shares have been tipped for big things by a leading broker...

Read more »

a small child and a pug dog sit in a go cart wearing old fashioned drivers headress and goggles as the drive along a country road with the boy holding his arm in the air and shouting as if celebrating their performance behind the wheel.
Growth Shares

Top ASX growth shares to buy in March 2023

Could these growth stocks be set to hit the accelerator?

Read more »

A businessman hugs his computer and smiles.
Growth Shares

Buy and hold these ASX 200 shares: brokers

These could be great options for investors looking for buy and hold investments.

Read more »

A man sees some good news on his phone and gives a little cheer.
Growth Shares

Analysts say these exciting ASX growth shares are buys this month

These could be the growth shares to buy right now according to analysts.

Read more »

A boy is about to rocket from a copper-coloured field of hay into the sky.
Growth Shares

2 explosive ASX growth shares to buy this month: analysts

There are different levels of growth and these shares are in the clouds...

Read more »

A man sees some good news on his phone and gives a little cheer.
Growth Shares

2 ASX growth shares to buy: Goldman Sachs

Goldman Sachs believes these ASX shares are well-positioned for strong growth.

Read more »

A young man sits at his desk working on his laptop with a big smile on his face due to his ASX shares going up and in particular the Computershare share price
Growth Shares

These are the ASX 200 shares to buy in March: experts

Now could be the time to pounce on these ASX 200 shares.

Read more »