Tesla shares jolted up nearly 30 percent in two days thanks to stock upgrade
Shares of Tesla surged 13 percent on Tuesday after Credit Suisse upgraded its rating on the electric-car maker and as Wall Street rallied on optimism the coronavirus outbreak was reaching a plateau.
The stock has jumped nearly 30 percent in the past two days as investors look beyond disruptions caused by the pandemic, which has forced Tesla to close its California factory, furlough workers and cut salaries.
Credit Suisse raised its rating on Tesla to “neutral” from “underperform,” saying short-term changes in demand related to the outbreak will distract traditional automakers like General Motors and Ford in their gradual transition toward electric vehicles.
“Coronavirus disruption will make it more difficult for legacy automakers to balance the long-term shift [to electric vehicles] in the face of near-term cycle disruption,” Credit Suisse analyst Dan Levy wrote in a research note.
Levy raised his target price by $165, to $580, compared to Tesla’s price of $733 on Tuesday.
Tesla’s stock has doubled from its March low and remains down 20 percent from its record high close in February, before fears about the coronavirus’ impact on the global economy triggered a deep stock market sell-off.
The S&P 500 rallied 2.6 percent on Tuesday as some US states developed plans to reopen their economies, and the stock benchmark remains down about 16 percent from its Feb. 19 record high.