Not cool, Elon Musk.
That was the consensus reaction from market analysts after the Tesla CEO dismissed their queries as “so dry” during an earnings call, saying “boring, bonehead questions are not cool” and choosing to speak at length with a YouTube channel instead.
The dismissive reaction shaved billions off of the electric car maker’s market value. It also drew rebukes - and pointed question's about Tesla's sustainability - from a range of different firms.
“To be clear. Tonight's conference call didn't go very well. Feedback we have received from investors during and following the call support this view”, Morgan Stanley’s opinion said.
“Needless to say”, RBC Capital Markets said, “the call didn’t go well”.
“Truly Bizarre”, JP Morgan headlined its note.
Morgan Stanley added a warning shot to its note, cautioning against souring relations with Wall Street given that “an important part of Tesla’s success has been its relationship with the capital markets in funding its ambitious plans.
“The analysts on the call represent the providers of capital that Tesla has throughout its history depended upon”, the opinion said.
The company’s first-quarter performance was a mixed bag, JP Morgan wrote, with a record net loss offset by better-than-expected revenue numbers. But Mr Musk’s comments undercut what the likelihood that those results would generate “a modestly positive reaction in the shares”.
Analysts warned that Mr Tesla’s odd performance could spook investors who are looking for signs of stability as the company burns through cash and strives to ramp up production of the Model 3, its first mass-market vehicle.
“Investor feedback is that the performance shook confidence, which we'd argue is an important piece of the Tesla story”, an analysis from RBC Capital Markets said, noting that Tesla still faces “healthy, and warranted, skepticism” about its “near-term production capabilities”.