At 432x earnings, Tesla insiders bet $234B that innovation beats arithmetic.
This framework sees a capital-destroying machine trading at 432x earnings while insiders bet $234 billion that innovation will overcome economics.
If you bought this entire business today, would what it earns justify what you paid?
This framework sees extreme overvaluation — buying the entire company today would yield 0.058% on capital versus 4.33% risk-free. The market prices in transformation success that current fundamentals cannot support.
Can the company employ incremental capital at high rates of return?
Every dollar reinvested destroys value with ROIC far below cost of capital. The framework sees management doubling down on R&D investments that have yet to prove their returns.
How much cash does an owner get to keep after maintaining the business?
Cash generation shows extreme volatility with a 95% collapse followed by recovery. While current cash conversion looks healthy, the massive swings make owner earnings unpredictable — exactly what this framework avoids.
Are insiders buying or selling? Is capital invested where returns are high?
This framework sees a puzzling contradiction — insiders making record purchases while the business destroys value. Either management sees something fundamental analysis misses, or they've fallen victim to their own narrative.
Applying this framework reveals a business trading at 432x earnings while generating returns far below its cost of capital — a combination that would make any value investor uncomfortable. The record insider buying creates a fascinating tension with deteriorating fundamentals. This framework suggests waiting for either the business to prove its reinvestment strategy or the price to reconnect with reality. Would you pay 432 years of earnings for a company destroying value with every dollar it invests?
This analysis applies Warren Buffett's published investment framework to publicly available financial data. It is not authored by, endorsed by, or affiliated with Warren Buffett. Educational purposes only. Not financial advice.