Close Menu
TechCentralTechCentral

    Subscribe to the newsletter

    Get the best South African technology news and analysis delivered to your e-mail inbox every morning.

    Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube LinkedIn
    WhatsApp Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn YouTube
    TechCentralTechCentral
    • News
      The pivot South Africa's MVNOs cannot afford to miss

      The pivot South Africa’s MVNOs cannot afford to miss

      23 June 2026
      Why South Africans spend so little time on 5G

      Why South Africans spend so little time on 5G

      23 June 2026
      Oracle is slashing its workforce as it automates with AI

      Oracle is slashing its workforce as it automates with AI

      23 June 2026
      Namibia tells Starlink to take a hike - again

      Namibia tells Starlink to take a hike – again

      22 June 2026
      Joburg the epicentre of South Africa's tech brain drain

      Joburg the epicentre of South Africa’s tech brain drain

      22 June 2026
    • World

      SK Hynix ends Samsung’s 26-year reign at the top

      22 June 2026
      Google on the hook for what its AI tells users, court rules

      Google on the hook for what its AI tells users, court rules

      15 June 2026
      How Russians juggle VPNs to outwit the Kremlin

      How Russians juggle VPNs to outwit the Kremlin

      15 June 2026
      Amazon CEO flagged Anthropic AI risks to Washington - Andy Jassy

      Amazon CEO flagged Anthropic AI risks to Washington

      14 June 2026
      Trouble at Xbox

      Trouble at Xbox

      11 June 2026
    • In-depth
      AI boom sparks rally, frenzy and fear

      AI boom sparks rally, frenzy and fear

      11 June 2026
      Every plug-in hybrid on sale in South Africa, ranked by price - Lamborghini Temerario

      Every plug-in hybrid on sale in South Africa, ranked by price

      7 June 2026
      What Wi-Fi 8 will mean for wireless networks

      What Wi-Fi 8 will mean for wireless networks

      1 June 2026
      Alfa's electric rebel - Alfa Romeo Junior Elettrica Veloce

      Alfa’s electric rebel

      29 April 2026
      Africa switches on as Europe dims the lights

      Africa switches on as Europe dims the lights

      9 April 2026
    • TCS
      Watts & Wheels S1E6: 'A flawless Alfa and a bakkie that divides'

      Watts & Wheels S1E6: ‘A flawless Alfa and a bakkie that divides’

      17 June 2026
      Watts & Wheels S1E6: 'A flawless Alfa and a bakkie that divides'

      Watts & Wheels S1E5: ‘A Bentley of the bush and a car that swims’

      8 June 2026
      TCS | Charge's R1.8-billion bet on an off-grid EV future - Charge chairman Joubert Roux

      TCS | Charge’s R1.8-billion bet on an off-grid EV future

      18 May 2026
      TCS+ | The Up&Up Group on the hidden cost of AI - Jason Harrison

      TCS+ | The Up&Up Group on the hidden cost of AI

      13 May 2026
      Michael Rossouw

      TCS+ | The retirement decision most South Africans get wrong

      6 May 2026
    • Opinion
      Brazil's online gambling crackdown is a lesson for South Africa

      Brazil’s online gambling crackdown is a lesson for South Africa

      22 June 2026
      Finish the job Mandela started - Farzam Ehsani

      Finish the job Mandela started

      18 June 2026
      The author, Fanie van Rooyen

      The US just showed it can switch off our AI

      17 June 2026
      The author, Pambos Soteriades

      The clock is ticking on South African banks’ biggest advantage

      9 June 2026

      Clashing judgments leave South Africa’s crypto law unsettled

      2 June 2026
    • Company Hubs
      • 1Stream
      • Africa Data Centres
      • AfriGIS
      • Altron Digital Business
      • Altron Document Solutions
      • Altron Group
      • Arctic Wolf
      • Ascent Technology
      • AvertITD
      • BBD
      • Braintree
      • CallMiner
      • CambriLearn
      • CM Telecom
      • Contactable
      • CYBER1 Solutions
      • Digicloud Africa
      • Digimune
      • Domains.co.za
      • ESET
      • Euphoria Telecom
      • HOSTAFRICA
      • Incredible Business
      • iONLINE
      • IQbusiness
      • Iris Network Systems
      • Kaspersky
      • LSD Open
      • Mitel
      • NEC XON
      • Netstar
      • Network Platforms
      • Next DLP
      • Ovations
      • Paracon
      • Paratus
      • Q-KON
      • SevenC
      • SkyWire
      • Solid8 Technologies
      • Telit Cinterion
      • Telviva
      • Tenable
      • Vertiv
      • Videri Digital
      • Vodacom Business
      • Wipro
      • Workday
      • XLink
    • Sections
      • AI and machine learning
      • Banking
      • Broadcasting and Media
      • Cloud services
      • Contact centres and CX
      • Cryptocurrencies
      • Education and skills
      • Electronics and hardware
      • Energy and sustainability
      • Enterprise software
      • Financial services
      • HealthTech
      • Information security
      • Internet and connectivity
      • Internet of Things
      • Investment
      • IT services
      • Lifestyle
      • Motoring
      • Policy and regulation
      • Public sector
      • Retail and e-commerce
      • Satellite communications
      • Science
      • SMEs and start-ups
      • Social media
      • Talent and leadership
      • Telecoms
    • Events
    • Advertise
    TechCentralTechCentral
    Home » Sections » Motoring » Tesla’s wild week gets investors’ hearts pumping

    Tesla’s wild week gets investors’ hearts pumping

    By Agency Staff9 February 2020
    Twitter LinkedIn Facebook WhatsApp Email Telegram Copy Link
    News Alerts
    WhatsApp
    Elon Musk on stage with the Tesla Roadster

    Paul Nolte would never dream of plugging a stock like Tesla into a client portfolio at his advisory firm, Kingsview Wealth Management in Chicago. Too volatile. But a bearish options flier for his own account after the thing more than doubled in two months? Maybe.

    The 34-year money management veteran had been noticing double-digit price gaps that he considers hallmarks of shorts getting squeezed. When the forced buying was over, he figured, support would vanish and the shares would plunge. So he teed up US$10 000 worth of puts and waited. And watched. And waited. And thought about it. In the end, he couldn’t pull the trigger.

    “I was playing with fire,” Nolte said by phone. “I’m better off going to a casino and putting it on black. $10 000 can go to zero really fast.”

    When something is going on that is this big and this organised, you sit and watch. I stared at my computer non-stop, all day

    All week Tesla’s been doing that, tempting and taunting the pros, lighting up brokerage phone lines and getting blood pumping like no time since 1999. If the poster children for the market’s plodding march since 2009 were Apple and Netflix, Elon Musk’s bear-burner has become the standard bearer for what some now expect to be its last and looniest leg.

    With the stock spiking from $650 to $950 on Monday and Tuesday, Chris Brown, a Tesla short, barely slept. Lunch with colleagues was cancelled and breakfast didn’t come till 2pm. He thought about buying the stock after the shares breached a chart line at the end of last week, and selling it Monday — but decided against it. “It was discordant with my fundamental belief.”

    Different

    “When something is going on that is this big and this organised, you sit and watch,” Brown, managing member at Aristides Capital in Toledo, Ohio, said by phone, describing his actions on Monday. “I stared at my computer non-stop, all day.”

    Tuesday was different. Brown bought a call spread and a few bearish options, priced about half as much as ones betting the rally would keep going. That was the day Tesla plunged 14% into the close. The price of the put contract Brown eyed went from $9 to $12 by the time his order was filled, before soaring to $84. “We ended up making money.”

    Few were closer to the centre of the storm than Dan Ives, a managing director at Wedbush, whose once-bullish price targets were overtaken as Tesla vaulted over $700, $800, $900 in two days. At least 100 investors have called him looking for an edge on a stock that at peak frenzy made bitcoin feel like a toothpaste maker in terms of buying pressure.

    What was it like? “Newark Airport,” Ives said. “The chaos around the stock this week was like being in Newark Airport on a Friday night.”

    Almost $170-billion worth of Tesla shares have traded in five days, three times as much as Apple and five times as much as Microsoft. The stock’s 20-day volatility is nearly twice that of the next bounciest name in the Nasdaq 100, Biogen, which soared 26% this week. Three-quarters of a million trades have been executed since Monday, seven times the number in Boeing.

    “We’re talking about one of the more historic moves in a stock that’s happened over the last decade,” Ives said. “It’s caught the Street by surprise, which is very rare in a market where information is well known within two seconds of coming out. It’s been out of a Stephen King movie.”

    This is an over-$100-billion company that’s clearly in the old Eiffel Tower pattern, exactly like bitcoin

    Brian Frank sees it differently: Tesla as a harbinger of long-overdue doom, the beginning of the end to the buy-everything ethic that has been making his life miserable as a value investor.

    Bitcoin is the only other asset that has elicited as many calls, Frank said, maybe 5% of his clients have phoned about Tesla. Those all stopped when the shares rolled over on Wednesday, giving up 17%.

    “That it can happen with something as big and as visible as Tesla gives me hope that it’s clear there are bubbles out there,” said Frank, president at Frank Capital Partners in Key Biscayne, Florida. “This is an over-$100-billion company that’s clearly in the old Eiffel Tower pattern, exactly like bitcoin. And many other bubbles look like that, too.”  — Reported by Elena Popina and Vildana Hajric, (c) 2020 Bloomberg LP

    Follow TechCentral on Google News Add TechCentral as your preferred source on Google


    Elon Musk Tesla top
    WhatsApp YouTube
    Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn WhatsApp Telegram Email Copy Link
    Previous ArticleAnalysts see more upside as bitcoin bursts above $10 000
    Next Article Why the Wacs undersea cable broke

    Related Posts

    Namibia tells Starlink to take a hike - again

    Namibia tells Starlink to take a hike – again

    22 June 2026
    SpaceX locks in $60-billion Cursor deal

    SpaceX locks in $60-billion Cursor deal

    17 June 2026
    The dizzying scale of Elon Musk's fortune

    The dizzying scale of Elon Musk’s fortune

    12 June 2026
    Company News
    A smarter way to buy or renew your Red Hat subscriptions - LSD Open

    A smarter way to buy or renew your Red Hat subscriptions

    22 June 2026
    Moving past the pilot: inside the CloudZA and AWS closed-door AI executive roundtable

    CloudZA and AWS chart the road from AI pilots to production

    19 June 2026
    The role of edge infrastructure in South Africa's AI leap - OADC Open Access Data Centres

    The role of edge infrastructure in South Africa’s AI leap

    19 June 2026
    Opinion
    Brazil's online gambling crackdown is a lesson for South Africa

    Brazil’s online gambling crackdown is a lesson for South Africa

    22 June 2026
    Finish the job Mandela started - Farzam Ehsani

    Finish the job Mandela started

    18 June 2026
    The author, Fanie van Rooyen

    The US just showed it can switch off our AI

    17 June 2026

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the best South African technology news and analysis delivered to your e-mail inbox every morning.

    Latest Posts
    The pivot South Africa's MVNOs cannot afford to miss

    The pivot South Africa’s MVNOs cannot afford to miss

    23 June 2026
    Why South Africans spend so little time on 5G

    Why South Africans spend so little time on 5G

    23 June 2026
    Oracle is slashing its workforce as it automates with AI

    Oracle is slashing its workforce as it automates with AI

    23 June 2026
    Namibia tells Starlink to take a hike - again

    Namibia tells Starlink to take a hike – again

    22 June 2026
    © 2009 - 2026 NewsCentral Media
    • Cookie policy (ZA)
    • TechCentral – privacy and Popia

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Manage consent

    TechCentral uses cookies to enhance its offerings. Consenting to these technologies allows us to serve you better. Not consenting or withdrawing consent may adversely affect certain features and functions of the website.

    Functional Always active
    The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
    Preferences
    The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
    Statistics
    The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
    Marketing
    The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
    • Manage options
    • Manage services
    • Manage {vendor_count} vendors
    • Read more about these purposes
    View preferences
    • {title}
    • {title}
    • {title}