A deal for Hertz to buy 100,000 Tesla vehicles isn’t signed yet, CEO Elon Musk tweeted as he questioned the stock-market rally for the electric vehicle maker that has ensued.
Tesla
TSLA,
has surged past $1 trillion in market cap since the Oct. 25 announcement that Hertz will buy Model 3 vehicles, and also install thousands of electric-vehicle chargers.
“If any of this is based on Hertz, I’d like to emphasize that no contract has been signed yet,” Musk tweeted in response to a chart of the stock price from the widely followed Tesla Silicon Valley Club account.
“Tesla has far more demand than production, therefore we will only sell cars to Hertz for the same margin as to consumers,” added Musk, who according to Bloomberg now has three times the net worth of Berkshire Hathaway
BRK.B,
Chairman and CEO Warren Buffett. “Hertz deal has zero effect on our economics.”
Tesla shares slipped 2% in premarket trade.
Analysts had praised the impact of the Hertz deal on Tesla. The $4.2 billion order was considered by some a tipping point for electric vehicle demand, and gives the opportunity for potential drivers to try out a Tesla while travelling.
The Hertz
HTZ,
press release described it as “an initial order of 100,000 Teslas by the end of 2022,” implying the order had yet to be completed.
The rental company did however say the investment was far enough along that it put a section on Tesla as a risk factor in its 10-K dated Oct. 28. It warned not just of the risk of the concentration of such vehicles in its fleet, but the “economics ultimately associated with [electric vehicles], including depreciation and residual values, which will impact the attractiveness of our EVs to rideshare drivers,” the company said.
This post was originally published on Market Watch