Musk Could Use Some Extra Tesla Mojo Right Now

In between dabbling in geopolitics and buying-rejecting-no-really-buying Twitter, Elon Musk runs a car company.

Tesla Inc. reported results that were somehow simultaneously great and yet humdrum. Revenue jumped 56% versus a year ago, but missed expectations by 3%; the stock fell slightly after hours on Wednesday. Such is the flip-side of high expectations.

Musk appeared on the call and kicked off with a litany of reasons why, despite supply chain problems, a strong dollar, and “China experiencing a recession of sorts,” Tesla was set for an “epic end of the year.” The tone came across as a tad defensive, like the chief executive was reaching for reasons to put the results in the rearview. The reachiest moment was when he said Tesla — market cap: $696 billion — would eventually be worth twice Saudi Arabian Oil Co., or Saudi Aramco, equating to $4.2 trillion at current levels. Musk was careful to caveat with “now that doesn’t mean it will happen,” which is certainly a possibility worth considering.

For me, though, the more interesting bit of Musk’s soliloquy was when he said Tesla’s board had debated the idea of doing stock buybacks “extensively.” Musk, having mentioned a range of $5 billion to $10 billion, said a “meaningful” buyback was “likely.”