*By Conor White*
The positive [news](https://cheddar.com/videos/tesla-stock-surges-after-q2-earnings-report) in Tesla's second quarter earnings report outweighed the negatives for most investors, sending shares up more than 12 percent to their highest level in a month.
The electric carmaker announced that Model 3 production is up, but it posted losses of more than $700 million.
Some analysts have fundamental doubts about Tesla's future.
"It's a story stock," said Mark Spiegel, managing member at Stanphyl Capital. "What you have here are: bulls who couldn't care less about balance sheets or profit and loss statements; and you've got bears, or as I would call them, realists, who care a lot about that kind of stuff."
Spiegel counts himself in the latter group. He said in an interview Thursday on Cheddar that Tesla didn't do nearly enough to assuage fears about its future ー and that doesn't even account for all the other car companies eager for a bigger slice of the electric vehicle industry.
"There's a massive amount of competition coming for this company," Speigel said. "Between the Jaguar that's out now and the Audi, Mercedes, and Porsche coming out next year, it's going to destroy Model S and X sales, and that's where \[Tesla's\] margin isーwhatever margin they have."
And even though [outspoken](https://cheddar.com/videos/will-elon-musk-behave-on-this-weeks-earnings-call) CEO Elon Musk behaved on this conference call, there's no telling what he will do next.
After reaching its production goal of 5,000 Model 3 cars per week, Tesla reports it now wants to churn out 10,000 per week, "as fast as we can."
Spiegel dismissed those numbers ー and Tesla more generally.
"They're a perennial over-promiser and under-deliverer," he said.
"The reason they keep putting out these aggressive numbers is it supports the stock, which is an absurd valuation. If Tesla were a normal car company losing this much money, the stock would be in the low single digits."
For more on this story, [click here](https://cheddar.com/videos/tesla-announces-biggest-loss-ever-but-shares-rally).
Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse says he's not focused on the day to day price movements of his crypto. "XRP is the most efficient digital asset to solve a payments problem," he said.
Dave Clark, senior vice president of worldwide operations at Amazon, spoke to Cheddar from the floor of one of its fulfillment centers about the company's move to institute a $15 minimum wage and lobby the federal government to raise its wage, which has stood at $7.25 since 2009.
Ralf Reichert, CEO of ESL, sat down with Cheddar at this weekend's tournament at the Barclays Center and talked about the esports world and what he believes is needed for the enterprise to grow.
Scott Belsky, who sold his company to Adobe and is now its chief product officer, described how the maker of creative software transitioned into a cloud-based business model. The stock has outpaced the broader market over the last several years. Belsky also serves on Cheddar's board of directors.
Shares of Tesla dropped Tuesday, even though the company posted better than expected production numbers for the third quarter. Among the issues weighing on the stock: tariffs. The company said it costs as much as 60 percent more for Tesla to produce the same car a Chinese manufacturer would.
The e-commerce giant announced Tuesday it would raise the minimum wage for all employees to $15 an hour and lobby for an increase in the federal wage, which has stood at $7.25 since 2009.
Tune in at 10:50 am ET, when we speak to David Clark, Amazon's SVP of Worldwide Operations, about the news.
Olivier Rabiller, president and CEO of Honeywell spinoff Garrett Motion, told Cheddar on Monday that the company's strategy will not be to change too much. Rabiller also said that as the company heads into the electric vehicle space, he sees Tesla as a potential customer, not a competitor.
After the Pulse Nightclub shooting in Orlando in 2016, Sarah Ullman felt called to action. The Los Angeles-based filmmaker is the founder of "One Vote at a Time," a Super PAC created to stop gun violence. She spends her days making free campaign ads for politicians who support gun control policies and are running in competitive districts.
Tesla reportedly made a record 80,000 vehicles in the third quarter, marking a welcome change of subject for a company and CEO buffeted by scandal. Sean O'Kane, reporter for The Verge, and John Reed Stark, an SEC attorney, discussed the future of the company and how the settlement with regulators will affect Musk personally.
These are the headlines you Need 2 Know.
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