by Randall McAdory | Oct 3, 2020 | Investment, Tesla
I’ve started a newsletter, the TaaSMaster Newsletter, focused on investing in companies driving what could be an $8 trillion industry. The most recent newsletter topic discusses Tesla stock and why I finally decided to acquire shares in the company. Check it out HERE....
by Randall McAdory | Sep 24, 2020 | Batteries, Electric Vehicles, Elon Musk, Tesla
It’s a big deal, irrespective of the short-term impact on the stock price I’m a long Tesla shareholder who does not get too worked-up around the short-term gyrations of what is a very volatile stock. Battery Day didn’t seem to excite investors, with the Tesla...
by Randall McAdory | Sep 14, 2020 | Amazon, Electric Vehicles, GM Cruise Automation, Tesla, Transportation as a Service, Uber, Waymo
During a Prof G Show podcast (by Scott Galloway), NYU professor, Arun Sundararajan, gave his opinion around which entities will drive the mobility space (a space that I’m defining as transportation-as-a-service with self driving vehicles). Sundararajan believes...
by Randall McAdory | Sep 9, 2020 | Batteries, General Motors, Tesla
On the heels of the General Motors – Nikola partnership announcement, today we learn that GM has developed a wireless battery management system that’s a “first in any EV anywhere,” according to IEEE Spectrum. Not even tech-forward Tesla has...
by Randall McAdory | Sep 8, 2020 | Autonomous Vehicles, Electric Vehicles, General Motors, GM Cruise Automation, Nikola, Tesla
While Tesla gets lots of attention, GM has been building electric and autonomous vehicle capabilities over many years that seem to be missed by many. Now that the GM-Nikola partnership has been announced, maybe GM will begin to get some investor credit for its...
by Randall McAdory | Jul 10, 2020 | Autonomous Vehicles, Elon Musk, Tesla
Elon Musk once described Tesla’s lead over the competition in developing self-driving cars during an interview using the tennis analogy of “game, set, match.” My interpretation was that Musk believes Tesla’s development was so far ahead of...