The whipping post

SpaceX vs. Tesla: Here's Which Elon Musk Stock I'd Buy Right Now

Key Points

  • Investors in both SpaceX and Tesla are betting heavily on future industries that presently produce no profits.

  • At SpaceX, AI is the main story. At Tesla, investors see 1 billion robots (annually) in their future.

  • Tesla at least is profitable today, while SpaceX is not yet.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Space Exploration Technologies ›

Space Exploration Technologies (NASDAQ: SPCX), or SpaceX, has been a publicly traded company for seven days. Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) stock has been public for 16 years. SpaceX is the newer, shinier Elon Musk toy, and it’s getting more attention from the two companies’ co-CEO today.

Right now, there’s one reason you might want to own SpaceX stock over Tesla. But I’m not 100% convinced this is the right choice.

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Hands caress a crystal ball.

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What to know about SpaceX

SpaceX has three main areas of business, which it calls Space (old-school SpaceX), Connectivity (SpaceX’s Starlink subsidiary), and AI — the division Musk formed by merging artificial intelligence company Grok into social media company X, before he merged both those companies into SpaceX.

Of the three, Space is the best-known business and the one from which SpaceX derives its name. Starlink is the company’s only profitable business, earning $4.4 billion in operating profit last year, according to the SpaceX IPO Prospectus.

SpaceX sees its brightest future in artificial intelligence; however, it predicts this division will account for $26.5 trillion of its eventual $28.5 trillion total addressable market (TAM). It’s also the business where SpaceX splashed out $60 billion to acquire Cursor last week.

What to know about Tesla

Tesla is a little different. Like SpaceX, Tesla has a core business: selling electric cars. This division accounted for 86.5% of Tesla’s $94.8 billion in revenue last year, according to data from S&P Global Market Intelligence.

Tesla also has an Energy Generation and Storage business — solar power and batteries. Similar to the situation with SpaceX’s Starlink vis-à-vis Space, this corollary business is arguably better than the business for which the company is best known. “Energy” at Tesla earns 30% gross profit margins — twice as profitable as Tesla’s Automotive unit!

Last and least is Tesla’s robotics business, currently just a start-up that lacks its own division, though robotics is analogous to “AI” at SpaceX. According to Elon Musk, this business that barely registers today could one day be building 1 billion humanoid robots a year and lift Tesla’s market value past $25 trillion.

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SpaceX vs. Tesla

Both SpaceX and Tesla are very expensive stocks. Investors in both companies are betting heavily on presently unfulfilled prospects: abundant AI profits in the case of SpaceX, and 1 billion robots a year for Tesla.

Which dreams are more likely to materialize in the future is hard to say. What I can tell you is how the two stocks’ valuations look today to minimize the risk of overpaying for a future that may not materialize.

Let’s start with SpaceX. The space company generated $19.3 billion in revenue over the past year and lost $8.7 billion in the process. SpaceX boasts about $70 billion in net cash, which is great — because SpaceX is burning nearly $20 billion in negative free cash flow per year.

Tesla, on the other hand, seems a much more stable business. Annual sales approach $98 billion and are profitable, with an operating profit margin of 4.9%. Free cash flow is positive — $7 billion annually — adding to Tesla’s $30 billion in net cash on the balance sheet.

Of the two, I prefer Tesla as the less risky of the two very risky stocks.

Should you buy stock in Space Exploration Technologies right now?

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Rich Smith has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Tesla. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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