He called Tesla's stock crash. Now he thinks it'll fall even more.

He called Tesla's stock crash. Now he thinks it'll fall even more.

Shares of Tesla have crashed 48% since peaking in mid-December, but the stock still isn't cheap enough for the company's longtime investor Ross Gerber to buy back in.

Gerber — who's been a Tesla investor for years , having loaded up on the stock before it boomed — told Business Insider last month that he expected a drop of as much as 50% in the stock this year as CEO Elon Musk focused on other endeavors , including DOGE, SpaceX, xAI, and X.

His prediction proved prescient. While Tesla shares were already in a downslide before the interview, they've continued to fall. As of Wednesday's close, the stock had tumbled another 31% since his late-February comments.

Now Gerber is doubling down. In a new interview, he told BI that he didn't see a clear path for it to rebound this year, even after recent losses.

Gerber — who's the president and CEO of Gerber Kawasaki Wealth & Investment Management, which oversees roughly $3 billion in assets — has had no issue matching his words with action. He reduced his firm's Tesla stake by 31% in 2024, regulatory filings show, leaving him with 262,000 Tesla shares, which were worth $106 million at the end of last year.

In fresh comments, the Tesla bull turned skeptic reiterated his view that even after the sharp correction, Tesla stock is still too expensive.

What does Tesla stock have to do to rebound?

Gerber thinks the answer is simple but elusive: Earnings have to rise.

"If I do $5 in earnings, at 50 times earnings, I can get to $250," Gerber said. "But they have no path to that."

Tesla's earnings per share dropped 52% in 2024 to $2.04. Analysts estimate the company is set to earn $2.75 a share in 2025 and $3.65 in 2026.

But those estimates have been in doubt recently amid an uncertain economic environment and declining Tesla sales around the world.

Gerber sees Musk's divisive political maneuvering as a lasting headwind for the Tesla brand, and he didn't pull punches when discussing it. He criticized Musk's gesture at the presidential inauguration that's been likened to a Nazi salute, said that he'd alienated customers with his political efforts and stances, and was critical of President Donald Trump's promise to buy a Tesla to support the brand.

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