Buying Tesla Stock Taught Me a Costly Lesson

Source The Motley Fool

Key Points

  • Tesla returned nearly 1,900% on my original investment, but I still wish I'd never bought it.

  • The Twitter acquisition revealed that Elon Musk's appeal was more self-marketing than tech genius.

  • Great returns don't mean you were right; sometimes you just got lucky.

  • These 10 stocks could mint the next wave of millionaires ›

I bought Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) stock in June 2014 because I thought Elon Musk was going to save humanity.

Solar roofs on every house. Martian colonies by 2040. Cool electric cars making gas stations historical curiosities, like phone booths or Blockbuster Video. The stock barely kept up with the S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC) over the first five years, but I was convinced that things would change and give Tesla a real push.

Will AI create the world's first trillionaire? Our team just released a report on the one little-known company, called an "Indispensable Monopoly" providing the critical technology Nvidia and Intel both need. Continue »

I added more shares in 2019. Wrote glowing Fool articles about his genius. Defended him at dinner parties. The whole shebang.

A Tesla Cybertruck with its loading ramp deployed.

Image source: Tesla.

The red flags I couldn't ignore anymore

But something changed. The Cybertruck idea sounded fantastic at first, with ultra-economic manufacturing principles and a unique design. Still, the early prototypes were tough to defend, and Musk's Twitter-centric marketing efforts started to look desperate.

So, I sold a few shares in 2021, making sure I had covered my original investment and then some, just in case the bad Cybertruck vibes turned out to be correct.

Then came the Twitter saga.

A supposed genius offered $44 billion for a company, immediately regretted it, tried to wriggle out, failed, and then lit the whole thing on fire. It was...clarifying.

Try to maintain "he's playing 4D chess" energy when Musk is posting meme-stock tweets at 3 a.m. while trying to buy the social media platform. Bet you can't.

I slammed the "sell" button hard in the summer of 2022, converting 88% of my remaining Tesla shares to cold, hard cash. Like the January 2021 sale, this batch yielded a 1,900% return.

Two weeks before the first Cybertruck deliveries, I'd had enough. The last handful of shares left my account at a 1,480% gain.

Tesla bulls might still be right about the future

The stock is higher now, about 2,780% above my starting price. Some of my Fool colleagues still recommend Tesla. They see robotaxis, humanoid robots, a pre-initial public offering (IPO) link to reusable spaceships, and a glorious artificial intelligence (AI)-powered future.

Maybe they're right. I've been wrong about Musk before, just in the opposite direction.

What I actually learned from Tesla

So, Tesla made me plenty of money, but I still wish I had left the stock alone in 2014.

Here's my costly lesson: I spent a decade thinking I'd found a forever stock. A company so transformative that I would hold it until I die and pass it to my kids. Instead, I'd bought a ticket to the Elon Musk Experience, and when I stopped enjoying the show, the investment stopped making sense.

You can't separate a founder-cult stock from the founder. I tried. It doesn't work. Every time Tesla announces something cool, I think about the CEO posting conspiracy theories. Every time the stock jumps, I remember that Full Self-Driving has been "coming next year" since the Obama administration.

The money was great. Truly, no complaints on that front. But I learned something more valuable: Don't hold stocks in companies you don't believe in anymore, no matter how green your brokerage screen looks. At some point, you're not an investor; you're just along for someone else's ride.

These days, I sleep better. My portfolio is less thrilling. And when Elon tweets something unhinged at midnight, I can just scroll past.

That's worth more than another 50% gain.

Don’t miss this second chance at a potentially lucrative opportunity

Ever feel like you missed the boat in buying the most successful stocks? Then you’ll want to hear this.

On rare occasions, our expert team of analysts issues a “Double Down” stock recommendation for companies that they think are about to pop. If you’re worried you’ve already missed your chance to invest, now is the best time to buy before it’s too late. And the numbers speak for themselves:

  • Nvidia: if you invested $1,000 when we doubled down in 2009, you’d have $467,544!*
  • Apple: if you invested $1,000 when we doubled down in 2008, you’d have $47,627!*
  • Netflix: if you invested $1,000 when we doubled down in 2004, you’d have $514,000!*

Right now, we’re issuing “Double Down” alerts for three incredible companies, available when you join Stock Advisor, and there may not be another chance like this anytime soon.

See the 3 stocks »

*Stock Advisor returns as of March 15, 2026.

Anders Bylund has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Tesla. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
placeholder
Pi Network Price Annual Forecast: PI Heads Into a Volatile 2026 as Utility Questions Collide With Big UnlocksPi Network heads into 2026 after a 90%+ 2025 drawdown from $3.00, with 17.5 million KYC users and a smart-contract-focused Stellar v23 upgrade offering upside potential, but 1.21 billion tokens unlocking and heavy exchange deposits (437 million PI) keeping supply pressure and trust risks firmly in focus.
Author  Mitrade
Dec 19, 2025
Pi Network heads into 2026 after a 90%+ 2025 drawdown from $3.00, with 17.5 million KYC users and a smart-contract-focused Stellar v23 upgrade offering upside potential, but 1.21 billion tokens unlocking and heavy exchange deposits (437 million PI) keeping supply pressure and trust risks firmly in focus.
placeholder
Markets in 2026: Will gold, Bitcoin, and the U.S. dollar make history again? — These are how leading institutions thinkAfter a turbulent 2025, what lies ahead for commodities, forex, and cryptocurrency markets in 2026?
Author  Insights
Dec 25, 2025
After a turbulent 2025, what lies ahead for commodities, forex, and cryptocurrency markets in 2026?
placeholder
ECB Policy Outlook for 2026: What It Could Mean for the Euro’s Next MoveWith the ECB likely holding rates steady at 2.15% and the Fed potentially extending cuts into 2026, EUR/USD may test 1.20 if Eurozone growth proves resilient, but weaker growth and an ECB pivot could pull the pair back toward 1.13 and potentially 1.10.
Author  Mitrade
Dec 26, 2025
With the ECB likely holding rates steady at 2.15% and the Fed potentially extending cuts into 2026, EUR/USD may test 1.20 if Eurozone growth proves resilient, but weaker growth and an ECB pivot could pull the pair back toward 1.13 and potentially 1.10.
placeholder
Gold weakens as inflation concerns lift US bond yields and USD; downside remains cushionedGold (XAU/USD) trades with a negative bias for the second consecutive day on Thursday, though it lacks follow-through selling and stalls the intraday slide near the $5,125 area.
Author  FXStreet
Mar 12, Thu
Gold (XAU/USD) trades with a negative bias for the second consecutive day on Thursday, though it lacks follow-through selling and stalls the intraday slide near the $5,125 area.
placeholder
WTI climbs above $95.50 as Iran says the Strait of Hormuz must remain closed West Texas Intermediate (WTI), the US crude oil benchmark, is trading around $95.75 during the early Asian trading hours on Friday. The WTI price surges due to the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz amid conflict involving the United States (US), Israel, and Iran.
Author  FXStreet
Mar 13, Fri
 West Texas Intermediate (WTI), the US crude oil benchmark, is trading around $95.75 during the early Asian trading hours on Friday. The WTI price surges due to the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz amid conflict involving the United States (US), Israel, and Iran.
goTop
quote