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Elon Musk Calls Boss of Tesla Troll Who's Heavily Invested In Oil Industry (electrek.co) 445

Okian Warrior shares a report from Electrek, written by Fred Lambert: One of Tesla's biggest anonymous trolls/shorts has been doxxed as an investment manager heavily invested in the oil industry. He has now deleted his Twitter account, which he used to promote his blog posts about Tesla and attack anyone saying anything that could be perceived as positive on Tesla, after Tesla CEO Elon Musk reportedly called his boss to complain about his behavior.

We are talking about "Montana Skeptic" who has been using Seeking Alpha, a financial blog aggregator, and Twitter to push the bear case on Tesla for the past 3 years. Hiding behind his anonymous persona on social media, Montana Skeptic went beyond just pushing the bear case. He also used the platforms to send insults and attacks to Tesla bulls, bloggers, YouTubers, and reporters discussing anything that he saw as potentially being positive for Tesla, including [this author] on numerous occasions to the point where I had to block him. But now that his real identity has been revealed to be Larry Fossi, a managing director at Rahr Enterprise, which is reportedly heavily invested in oil, we learn that his motivations could have originated from other reasons.

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Elon Musk Calls Boss of Tesla Troll Who's Heavily Invested In Oil Industry

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  • Clarifications: (Score:5, Informative)

    by Rei ( 128717 ) on Tuesday July 24, 2018 @05:09PM (#57003184) Homepage

    1) Montana Skeptic has (via intermediaries) presented two entirely different scenarios for why he left Twitter. One was that he was just leaving to spend more time focused on his investments, and it had nothing to do with outside pressure. The other is that Musk called his boss and his boss made him quit. Given his penchant for spinning conspiracy theories... take whichever one you want with a grain of salt.

    2) There's a heavy dose of irony, in that just a few days ago Montana Skeptic was part of the troll attacks against Pulitzer-prize winning auto journalist Dan Neil (mad that he wrote a glowing review of the Model 3 in the Wall Street Journal) which ultimately led to Dan deleting his twitter account. He wrote a gloating post after they succeeded, which is kind of funny in light of recent events.

    3) Fun Fact: Fossi (aka Montana Skeptic)'s employer is Stewart Rahl - a guy often described as Trump's only true friend, inflappably loyal. His office is in Trump Tower, two floors below Trump's.

    • by Okian Warrior ( 537106 ) on Tuesday July 24, 2018 @05:29PM (#57003282) Homepage Journal

      Tesla has been hit with a torrent of fake news recently, trying to drive the stock down.

      Most obviously and recently was the following:

      1) Someone (not Tesla) posted that 23% of Tesla reservations have been cancelled [techspot.com].
      2) Based on #1, an analyst downgraded the stock [marketwatch.com] from "hold" to "underperform".
      3) Tesla stock plummeted
      4) Tesla notices #1 above and responded:

      Dunno where this bs is coming from. Who knows about the future, but last week we had over 2000 S/X and 5000 Model 3 *new* net orders. — Elon Musk (@elonmusk) July 20, 2018

      (Note: Tesla makes about 6,000 cars/month, so an increase of 7000 cars puts them even further behind on reservations. And as noted in the link below, they have not started showing them in stores yet, so Tesla has yet to tap the "drive before they buy" potential pool of customers.)

      Word on the street is that shorts are running scared [cleantechnica.com], doing everything they can to drive down the stock price. Including insider sabotage, misleading financial spin, and online harassment such as the OP.

      This is basically the last-ditch effort of Tesla bears to drive the stock down. Once the next two quarters financials are in, there will be no case for shorting Tesla stock whatsoever.

      • My disclosure (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Okian Warrior ( 537106 ) on Tuesday July 24, 2018 @05:44PM (#57003392) Homepage Journal

        Someone else made a valid point about disclosing biases, so here is mine: I own Tesla stock, and I'm "long" on it.

        I originally wanted to do some study of the stock market, and I purchased the stock to make the study "valuable" to me.

        That turned out to be a lucky choice because Tesla is the hurricane eye of controversial stock market reporting. It's the perfect test case for deciding whether stock market news reports, statistics, and opinions have any informational value.

        In any event, be aware that I own some shares and have an interest in seeing Tesla succeed.

        • by Rei ( 128717 )

          Same here. I've been talking about Tesla for years, and didn't own any Tesla stock until this spring, when Tesla fell down to $263. But after years and years of talking about it, I finally decided to put my money where my mouth was, as the short theses had gotten so ridiculous. Listening to them was often like listening to the Pizzagate crowd - just one silly conspiracy theory after the next.

          Of course, I mention this fact in almost every thread on Tesla, so it should hardly be a surprise to anyone. ;)

          • Re:My disclosure (Score:4, Interesting)

            by AlanObject ( 3603453 ) on Tuesday July 24, 2018 @08:05PM (#57004120)

            I've been talking about Tesla for years, and didn't own any Tesla stock until this spring, when Tesla fell down to $263. ...

            I missed the early part of public Tesla trading and had meant to buy, but at the time I was so busy I just forgot about it until it was too late.

            Then the news was all about Telsa Fires! Fires! Every Tesla car ever made is bursting into flame! Remember that?

            The stock tanked for a while and that's when I bought. Never regretted it. Wish I had bought more but I didn't have the cash. But it was an easy decision because the negative hype was just so obvious that it just couldn't control the stock price forever. And it didn't.

            I live in Tesla's neighborhood. My housekeeper's husband works there as a welder. Every day I drive down Kato road. These days it is lined with car-transport trucks either loaded or waiting to be loaded. They have no place to park all the trucks they need and these trucks are parked about 1Km from the plant and that's the closest parking.

            I also talk to their vendors. LIke PCB contract manufacturers and metal shops. Tesla is not well liked in that regard because they are aggressive on price and very demanding. Some local shops turn down their business because if they took it they would use most/all of their capacity on Tesla and pretty much neglect the rest of their customer base. The shops that did take their business are in good times right now and if it lasts it will turn out they made the right decision.

            For now, the forecast is good.

            Tesla could have a force majure type of event or some major disaster that can bring them down, at least for a while. Their (Musk's) cash flow management requires nerves of steel but they seem to be making it work. In spite of the CONSTANT posts I see here about how they are "out of cash" and will have to shut their doors yada yada. Yeah the risk is NOT nonexistent and NOT negligible but the counter to that is very convincing:

            1. Technological leadership.

            2. Market space leadership.

            3. Production leadership.

            4. Big Backlog of Orders.

            Call Musk delusional or badly behaved all you want but the above points are what is driving his stock price.

      • That must be why Tesla is asking suppliers to refund payments made over the last two years [nytimes.com], something GM and Chrysler have done while trying (unsuccessfully) to avoid bankruptcy.
      • by JBMcB ( 73720 )

        started showing them in stores yet, so Tesla has yet to tap the "drive before they buy" potential pool of customers.)

        I don't know about the veracity of everything else, but this seems untrue. The Tesla store a mile away from my house has had a Model 3 in it's showroom for several weeks. Maybe it isn't a derivable sample?

      • (Note: Tesla makes about 6,000 cars/month, so an increase of 7000 cars puts them even further behind on reservations. And as noted in the link below, they have not started showing them in stores yet, so Tesla has yet to tap the "drive before they buy" potential pool of customers.)
        FYI: Tesla makes 7000 cars per week

    • spend more time focused on his investments

      Get back to work, slacker.

      Musk called his boss and his boss made him quit.

      Get back to work, slacker.

      Yes. I can see these after very different.

  • Always . . . (Score:4, Insightful)

    by hduff ( 570443 ) <hoytduff@[ ]il.com ['gma' in gap]> on Tuesday July 24, 2018 @05:09PM (#57003186) Homepage Journal

    Always examine the hidden agenda.

    • Re:Always . . . (Score:5, Insightful)

      by TWX ( 665546 ) on Tuesday July 24, 2018 @05:19PM (#57003222)

      Mmmhmm.

      There are plenty of legitimate complaints. Personally I really dislike all of the electronic crap that they've built in to the Model 3. Electrically-opening doors because that was the solution to avoid damaging the weatherstripping by lowering the window a centimeter prior to actuating the door mechanism? Stupid. Removing basically the entire traditional behind-steeringwheel dash cluster and removing basically all non-touchscreen driver controls? Really stupid. Designing and building a seemingly successful car whose use of petroleum products is at-most limited to lubricants and possibly cabin refrigeration gases? Not so stupid.

      I really wish that Tesla had considered the Model 3 as an S with most of the unnecessary electronics removed, rather than going exactly the opposite in removing the traditional controls. I won't buy a car that requires me to take my eyes off of the road to operate a touchscreen in order to use basic features.

      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward

        I own 3 BMWs (oldest being a 2006 Z4) and they all lower the window when opening the doors. It's a common feature. I agree that making everything touchscreen is stupid though.

      • Even with physical controls you have to look down to operate them though. I was just on a road trip and every time I wanted to adjust the AC I looked down to see what temp and fan settings I had to adjust them to new settings I wanted...

        That said I would like to see a few physical controls as I don't like the number of clicks it takes to get to a few things. I think it would be cool if they had slots in a few places in the car where additional physical controls could be placed and programmed to do whateve

        • Re:Always . . . (Score:5, Informative)

          by Rei ( 128717 ) on Tuesday July 24, 2018 @05:38PM (#57003348) Homepage

          The Model 3's approach is to put all of the most common functions on the steering wheel controls. The next most common functions - and most common things to see - are on the far left of the screen, right beside the wheel, so right next to your right hand, or right along the bottom rim. Note that it's a 16:9 15" screen (aka 33cm width) with 11 square buttons across. Meaning that each button is 3x3cm. These are not small controls by any stretch, and they're immediately adjacent to a rim, acting as a guideline.

          (Note: to anyone who's never driven a car with a central speedometer: you're predominantly looking "down" either way. The only difference is that with a central speedometer - not even that Model 3's is all that central - you're also looking somewhat to the right. The advantage is that it's never blocked by the steering wheel or your hands, and that the dash can be lowered in front of the driver).

          As for the specific case of air conditioning: it's a control larger than a credit card, right next to your right hand, so if you can't see that and hit in your peripheral vision, something's wrong with you.

          As I've written elsewhere, there’s actually some very good reasons for the way the air vents are. First off, the big one: you have to be able to reach any controls in the car as a driver. So if your controls for your air vents are on the air vents, that means that they must be within reach of a comfortable driving position. Which means that the dash has to be so far forward that you can reach them. By having electronic controls for the vents, they can move the dash back and down, which improves ingress/egress and forward visibility.

          Having electronically controlled vents means that they can make the outflow for the vent much larger. The larger the outflow, the quieter the airflow for a given flow volume, and the higher the peak flow volume you can achieve.

          Electronically controlled vents means that vents can be autoadjusted to driver profiles. So whatever the current driver likes can be automatically set when said driver sits down. And there’s the potential for other features in the future — for example, someone pointed out to Musk (the idea seemed well received, so we may see it ~6 months from now) that when one turns on the air conditioning remotely, the vents should autoaim at the seats to cool them down.

          Lastly, you have the fact that you can adjust multiple vents at the same time, with the vent-ganging functionality.

          • I've been in a Model 3. and a model S (although I've not driven either). I knew there were some steering wheel controls but still feel like a few dedicated controls would be of help...

            The vent profiles are OK but to me vent adjustments are per vent depending very much on what I am wearing, where the sun is coming into the car, and the temperature I want. So a profile is not as super helpful as being able to micro-manage vent output easily.

            I like a lot of the ideas behind a software driven interior, but li

          • by Strider- ( 39683 )

            . The only difference is that with a central speedometer - not even that Model 3's is all that central - you're also looking somewhat to the right.

            The bigger win with central speedometers is that it actually improves your response time. By putting it that much further away from your face, it increases your focus distance. This makes switching back and forth between the speedometer and the road just a hair quicker, which is more significant than most people realize, especially at highway speeds.

            That said, I too prefer physical controls. I can adjust the climate control system on my VW completely by touch, as all the controls are fully tactile, and have

          • They really should move to heads up display for the critical info like speed, you could easily project it above line of sight in the top band of the windshield or at the bottom of the windshield and it would work even better than a central instrument cluster. But that's cause I don't like it to the right, I think that's a bad choice personally and that it needs to be visible without turning the head.

      • I won't buy a car that requires me to take my eyes off of the road to operate a touchscreen in order to use basic features.

        They have also enabled drivers to do just that, safely. Unfortunately many drivers mistook that help with a full auto-pilot and... well we all know what happens when you trust automation more then you should.

        • by Rei ( 128717 )

          Humanity strikes again.

          SAE Level 2 in theory: A second set of eyes on the road, seeing the road in a different way as humans and with constant attention, is obviously an improvement over just one set of eyes on the road.

          SAE Level 2 in practice, at least with some people: "Great, now I can use Twitter and Facebook during my commute!"

  • by Idou ( 572394 ) on Tuesday July 24, 2018 @05:31PM (#57003302) Journal
    It really is an amazing car. . . I feel like a requirement to short the stock is one of the following:
    1) You have never test driven a Model 3
    2) You are a shill for some competing industry/company
    Yes, I am sure there is some kind of "rational" intrinsic valuation argument out there for shorting the stock, but, at the end of the day, Tesla makes cash from selling cars, not stock. . . and their latest car is amazing. They will sell as many as they can make at the current price point. If they manage to get the price down (which tends to happen at high volume), no army of Montana Skeptic shills will be able to save the oil industry from having to write-off huge portions of their fixed assets. . . Buckle-up and get ready for a crazy ride. . .
    • How is this "insightful"? I have been in a few Teslas. They are nice cars. What does that have to do with shorting a stock? You short a stock if you think the valuation is too high. That is the only reason. It doesn't mean you don't "like" Tesla, or "like" their products. That is immaterial. I don't short Tesla because of irrational people like you. Logically this stock should be in the single digits.
    • It really is an amazing car. . . I feel like a requirement to short the stock is one of the following:

      1) You have never test driven a Model 3

      2) You are a shill for some competing industry/company

      I like Tesla the car, but Tesla the company still presents some plausible reasons to doubt their financial future. The most compelling reason is that Tesla has yet to demonstrate that it can earn money consistently. It may eventually achieve financial stability, but it has yet to demonstrate stability. A second compelling reason is that the big car companies have yet to significantly compete in the market. Yes, there are technological impediments to catching up to Tesla products in the short term, but t

    • by Megol ( 3135005 )

      I suggest you go calibrate your thinker - it is making illogical inferences.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 24, 2018 @05:45PM (#57003400)

    The fantastically written headline actually says Elon Musk calls himself a Troll that is heavily invested in the Oil Industry

    English, it's not just for Christmas!

  • Not surprising (Score:5, Interesting)

    by owlaf ( 5251737 ) on Tuesday July 24, 2018 @06:19PM (#57003590)
    Back in 2009/2010 I followed daily why the barrel price would change. I would just use google new searching for oil, barrel price, etc. The articles written for the price change most often than not would have a bs feel like they may not tell the whole story. Once instance the price went fast at the beginning of the day because the oil supplies at the refineries had dropped, then turned right around and dropped below the start of the day due to the fact that the refineries were producing heating oil to be ready for the coming winter, a normal part of the business. About a week later the price went up again because it was report the supply last week dropped, without mentioning the logical reason why. Another instance the price of the barrel was regularly going up because the supplies were decreasing in December. The stated reason was likely because of demand. I finally found an article pointing out there used (not sure if still the case) be inventory tax on oil at the end of December. My better understanding of the market, I see the investors with a clue like how they can predictably make money from oil. That is why some don't like Tesla
  • Seriously. What the hell is that?
  • by cathector ( 972646 ) on Tuesday July 24, 2018 @06:43PM (#57003700)

    "Elon Musk Calls Boss of Tesla Troll Who's Heavily Invested In Oil Industry"

    "calls the boss"
    "calls up boss"
    "phones boss"

    "Elon Musk Phones the Boss of Heavily Oil-Invested Tesla Troll"

    • I had to read the headline a few times before I realised that Musk was not calling the "Boss of Tesla" a "Troll Who's Heavily Invested In Oil Industry." Seemed odd that Musk would attack the head of his own company as an enemy agent... but then Musk has said some off-the-rails things [abc.net.au] recently.
  • Troll? (Score:2, Informative)

    by fozzy1015 ( 264592 )
    People calling Montana Skeptic a troll don't know the definition of a troll. Educate yourself. Skeptic's analysis has been far more objective and fact-filled than anything the bulls have had to offer. One should question why all some can do is label him a troll instead of arguing his points.

    History has shown that the conman of the business world have attempted to scapegoat short sellers for the destruction caused by their frauds. See Enron.
    • Re:Troll? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by MightyMartian ( 840721 ) on Tuesday July 24, 2018 @07:07PM (#57003812) Journal

      He's a troll because he hid both his identity and the fundamental conflict of his own position. Maybe he has some decent criticism of Musk and Tesla (though from what I can tell, a big proportion was pure BS), but abusing anonymity and not disclosing his own business interests pretty much makes him a textbook troll. That, and the SEC may have some interest in his activities.

      • Re:Troll? (Score:4, Informative)

        by 110010001000 ( 697113 ) on Tuesday July 24, 2018 @07:52PM (#57004060) Homepage Journal
        What? That isn't what a troll is. A troll is a personally intentionally trying to get an emotional reaction by posting something. It has nothing to do with "not disclosing business interests". Good lord.
  • by Trogre ( 513942 ) on Tuesday July 24, 2018 @07:33PM (#57003964) Homepage

    So, if I'm parsing that headline correctly:

    Elon Musk called the boss of Tesla a "troll who's heavily invested in the oil industry".

    Cool story.

    Let me just look up who the boss of Tesla is... ...oh

  • Those who talk either don't know, or are talking their book. Tesla is the most shorted stock in the market. I'm sure you can figure out the rest...
  • "Bear case"? "Bulls"? I feel like I'm sitting at a table, drinking fancy, pretentious brands of whiskey with a bunch of douche bag stock traders.

  • by haruchai ( 17472 ) on Tuesday July 24, 2018 @09:43PM (#57004440)

    Almost as bad as the "pedo guy" comment, even if he did finally come to his senses and apologize.
    I've engaged with several of the most opinionated SeekingAlpha contributors who paint doom & gloom for Tesla and Montana Skeptic was by far the most cautious and reasonable one even if he was derisive of the cars and the overall plan.
    As an experienced commercial lawyer, I imagine he felt that Musk was rushing headlong too quickly and accumulating too much debt to ever be profitable with Chapter 11 restructuring.
    He was always clear in his articles that shorting Tesla is a dangerous game for the faint of heart and the foolhardy and that his own shorts were only by long-dated puts, early 2020 if memory serves.
    There were other shorts who claim to have made fortunes shorting Tesla like frequent SA comment poster NYC1965 who claims to have made over 1/2 a million shorting Tesla.

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