Tesla Bull Sees Lots of Sales, Little Profit From Charging Deals

Tesla Inc. may be in line for a relatively big revenue boost from opening its fast-chargers to competitors, with a more incremental potential increase in earnings, according to a longtime bull.

(Bloomberg) — Tesla Inc. may be in line for a relatively big revenue boost from opening its fast-chargers to competitors, with a more incremental potential increase in earnings, according to a longtime bull.

Ford Motor Co., General Motors Co. and at least four other automakers have announced plans to adopt Tesla’s formerly proprietary plug design in exchange for access to the company’s Supercharger network. Baird analyst Ben Kallo sees the deals contributing up to $15.7 billion to Tesla’s top line by 2030, and adding as much as 45 cents to earnings per share.

Kallo, who’s had the equivalent of a buy rating on Tesla’s stock since October 2020, estimates that Tesla’s Superchargers are operating at an 8.75% utilization rate now. If utilization were to remain steady through the end of the decade, he estimates non-Tesla drivers would boost revenue by $5.22 billion and add just 15 cents to earnings per share.

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The high end of Kallo’s estimates are based on the premise that automakers adopting what Tesla has called the North American Charging Standard, or NACS, connectors will help lift Supercharger utilization to 26.25% by 2030. In addition to Ford and GM, automakers that have adopted NACS include Rivian Automotive Inc., Volvo Car AB, Polestar and Mercedes-Benz.

“We view the opening of TSLA’s Supercharger network as a step toward NACS becoming the sole charger and estimate that the additional traffic will expand TSLA’s Services business,” Kallo wrote.

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