The following is not a recommendation to buy, sell, or make any changes to your stock portfolio. This post is simply showcasing the data we use to select stocks in our proprietary investment models at Northshore Wealth Management.
Tesla is poised to be the leading manufacturer of humanoid robots for labor and manufacturing. With the current administration moving quickly on immigration as well as trade and foreign manufacturing, they are fueling a significant need for affordable domestic robotic labor. Three years left in this administration is ample time for Tesla to produce a quarter of a million humanoids, reaching sales in the trillions. Tesla’s goal is to produce 100,000 of them in 2025. We may even see government subsidization on robotic automation to shore up domestic company manufacturing as it rapidly shifts to US soil.
For the last few years, investors have priced TSLA shares at what they will be worth one day, not what they are worth in the present. This leaves room for the price to correct to its present value. As you can see by today’s chart, if you followed the crowd and bought the hype in January 2021, your TSLA shares are worth the same price today. No growth.

What about didivends? TSLA has never paid one. That alone isn’t a deal breaker. I’m just including that to show that no growth truly means no growth in this example.
If time is our best asset in investing, we mustn’t waste it. We can’t afford to lose four years of growth. When TSLA’s humanoids are ready for market, and if there is a steady demand and if the share price is fair, it will have the potential to be a wise investment. I don’t buy assets that might grow in the future; I buy assets that are growing now. I want assets that will grow this year, remain in a healthy financial position, and be reasonably priced for sustained growth. With ample companies offering this today, there is no reason to park money in a company that might be positioned for sustained growth someday. I’m keeping an eye on TSLA, and I see potential on the horizon, but It’s not held in any of our growth models yet.


