Chart Of The Day: Tech Rout, Sector Competition Pressure Tesla Shares

 | Mar 04, 2021 09:38AM ET

Tesla shares are falling. Hard.

The obvious reason is that the market is undergoing a cyclical rotation, shifting from growth to value stocks, which are seen to do better during an economic recovery, something vaccines and stimulus are expected to foster. Electric vehicle manufacturer Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) could be regarded as the mother of all large cap growth stocks. During 2020, shares of the Palo Alto-based company rose by 720%.

But this year so far has been very different. Over the past three months the stock has been on a wild ride. It's currently down almost 11% for the year, versus the tech-heavy NASDAQ 100 index, which is down just 0.09% as of yesterday's close.

There, however, could be a secondary reason electric car investors might be selling out of Tesla in favor of spreading their risk. Analysts at Morgan Stanley made the call earlier this year that General Motors (NYSE:GM)—which has been restructuring , with a view toward aggressively ramping up EV efforts—will be the auto industry story of the year, likely to gain market share at the expense of Tesla.

Tesla’s stock is down for the fourth week in a row, its longest losing streak since May 2019, when it was selling for $37 per share. But that was then. Here's what's going on now: