KEY POINTS
  • Wedbush analyst Dan Ives, a well-known Tesla bull, said in a note to investors Sunday that the Berlin "Gigafactory" is of the utmost importance to Tesla.
  • Tesla's market cap soared to over $1 trillion for the first time last October but it has been falling gradually ever since and it now stands at less than $850 billion.
A Tesla Model Y is seen in a production hall of the Tesla Gigafactory during the open day. In Grünheide, east of Berlin, the first vehicles are to roll off the production line from the end of 2021.

A "major overhang" on Tesla's stock has been removed after German authorities said the carmaker could start production at a new factory in Berlin, according to Wedbush analyst Dan Ives.

The conditional license for the vehicle and battery plants in Brandenburg was expected following months of delays. Tesla had intended to start production of vehicles by early summer of 2021, but the Covid pandemic, supply chain complications and clashes with environmentalists slowed its progress.