SINCE Donald Trump’s election win, the hedge funds clinging on to bets against Tesla have lost billions of US dollars, as they feel the fallout of the special relationship between the president-elect and Elon Musk.
Hedge funds that had short positions against Tesla between election day and Friday’s (Nov 8) close took an on-paper hit of at least US$5.2 billion, according to Bloomberg calculations based on data compiled by S3 Partners.
They were among a shrinking group caught out, as many of their peers unwound bets against Tesla over the past four months, according to separate data provided by Hazeltree tracking the positions of more than 500 hedge funds. That adjustment of positions coincided with Musk’s endorsement of Trump on Jul 13.
The Tesla chief executive officer has emerged as Trump’s biggest billionaire fan. Musk has used his position as the world’s richest person to turbocharge Trump’s campaign, making him one of the biggest donors of the 2024 election. Throwing his lot in with the president-elect now lines Musk up for a position of political influence, as Trump makes clear he’s planning to reward loyalists.
Per Lekander, CEO of hedge fund manager Clean Energy Transition, said he had “a small short in Tesla heading into the election”. He’d managed to whittle the position down “quite a lot”, meaning his losses ended up being “pretty small”.
“But we have lost some money,” he said.
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Since the Nov 5 election, Tesla shares have gained close to 30 per cent, representing well over US$200 billion in additional market value. Against that backdrop, hedge funds that had previously built short bets against the company have since rushed to reverse course.
As at Nov 6, only 7 per cent of hedge funds were net short Tesla, down from 17 per cent in early July, according to weekly data provided by Hazeltree. That said, only 8 per cent are net long the stock.
Tesla has proved a dangerous stock to short, even as the rest of the electric vehicle (EV) industry struggles with headwinds spanning trade tensions, flagging consumer demand and increasing competition. In July, almost one-fifth of hedge funds tracked by Hazeltree had built bets against Tesla, only to be badly wrong-footed after the company unveiled sales figures that triggered a steep rally.
The wider EV sector, meanwhile, has lost more than 12 per cent this year, based on the performance of the KraneShares Electric Vehicles and Future Mobility Index ETF. That follows a roughly 9 per cent decline in 2023. By contrast, Tesla is up roughly 30 per cent in 2024, after more than doubling its value last year.
Tesla’s performance also stands out in contrast to other stocks in the green sector. As markets digested the news of Trump’s victory, renewables stocks spanning wind to solar started to tank, amid fears Trump will live up to his promise to slash clean-energy incentives.
Lekander said that in a little over a year from now, he expects even Tesla will feel the sting of Trump’s anti-climate policies.
Notwithstanding the connection between the president-elect and Musk, “Trump’s win is very negative for Tesla as an auto company,” Lekander said. In about 12 to 18 months, the Trump administration will “eliminate a lot of the subsidies which Tesla really has been winning on”.
Musk has lobbied for a role in Trump’s administration that would allow him to cut what he characterises as government bureaucracy and waste. Trump quickly latched onto the idea, publicly playing with the notion of a job as “Secretary of Cost Cutting” for the Tesla CEO.
Musk’s “position of influence now is sort of a bridge between, arguably, the tech community and Washington”, said Edward Lees, portfolio manager at BNP Paribas Asset Management.
Lees said he’s “held Tesla at various points”, without elaborating on current positions.
Musk, who publicly threw his support behind Trump after the then-presidential candidate survived an assassination attempt in July, has seen his own fortune soar in connection with the election outcome. In the days following the election, Tesla’s stock-price surge added US$50 billion to his net worth, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. That’s after Musk, who oversees an empire of six companies including X and Space X, spent more than US$130 million on Trump and down-ballot Republicans in competitive House races.
Lekander said he reckons that the Trump effect accounts for roughly a third of Tesla’s current share price of more than US$300. “So now Tesla’s stock is more of a punting exercise on how much can Trump help Elon,” he said. BLOOMBERG