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Tesla deliveries. Tesla stock. Tesla fundamentals. Tesla trading trend.
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The McDonald's corporation saw Revenue fall eight percent in 2022. And guess what the stock did? It fell 1.8 percent. That's right. After McDonald's Revenue was down eight percent in a year, the stock was only down 1.8 percent.

Basically flat. In contrast, Apple grew nine percent in the last quarter year over year after growing 35 in 2021. Yet, the stock fell 28 in 2022.. And of course, in this video, we're going to be talking about Tesla's disastrous 2022..

So what's happening here with Wall Street Why is it same that all of a sudden stock prices are completely detached from fundamentals in the opposite direction? Now, don't get me wrong, socks were relatively detached from their fundamentals in November of 2021 when everything was skyrocketing. Even Looney stocks were skyrocketing. Well, that has since turned on its head. But why does it seem like a company like McDonald's with shrinking revenues and low growth forecasts would be flat in 2022 when companies with real growth like Apple are plummeting.

And of course, Tesla even more so. well, what's happening is a trend towards a recessionary rotation. This is actually very normal in institutional money management. An Institutional Money management, hedge funds, and professional money managers move in anticipation of a recession by going into consumer staple stocks or Industrials or energy related stocks.

This is exactly what happened in 2022.. if you look at the military, industrial, complex, oil companies or Staples like McDonald's these stocks fared pretty dang well. You can even look at companies like John Deere and see similar pretty decent performance relative to growth stocks like Tech. That's because when you head into a recessionary Time the fundamentals aren't What matter, what matters is the trend.

The trend is your friend. It's a short-term bet that as you head towards a recession, growth is what you sell and Staples are what you move into. And that's why you actually see a substantial detach from fundamentals and stock prices. And that's why when you look at a company like Tesla, you're starting to see a company that's trading for well, somewhere around 22 times 2023 expected earnings per share, which is one of the lowest valuations that we've ever seen for Tesla And with a growth rate of at least 40 percent, you're looking at a PEG ratio of nearly 0.5 So what happened today and why is Tesla trading at the time of this recording down nine to ten percent? Well, Tesla Reported deliveries.

However, these deliveries missed expectations many folks when they first saw the numbers quoted this Miss as a huge miss? A terrible Miss for Tesla. Yet, when you actually do the numbers and you see that, wait a minute. The numbers of 405 278 deliveries was actually only off expectations of 420 760 by about three percent. So, deliveries missed by three percent and the stock is down about 10 percent.

And at the same time, when we consider the fact that last quarter Tesla delivered 343, 000 Vehicles Wall Street seems to be blind to the fact that Tesla is actually growing substantially faster than it thinks it is. see: Wall Street is looking for a 50 year-over-year growth rate rate for Tesla deliveries, and unfortunately, we delivered about 40.33 That's below 50 percent clearly, and we're going to look at the earnings call in just a moment to see what kind of hints we got that we might in the near term Miss some of these 50 targets. But what's remarkable is the following: Look at this next tweet that I sent just this morning: Tesla Stocked down nine percent after missing delivery Expectations by three percent yet Wall Street Conveniently forgets that deliveries growing from 343 000 in the third quarter to over 405 000 in the fourth quarter represents an 18 gain, quarter over quarter, a sequential gain, and a gain of 72 percent annualized. What that means is if Tesla's deliveries continue to grow at 18 per quarter, the annualized growth rate, which is a multiple.
it is not an X phone, and it's a multiple. it's a path that you're on. It's the speed you're traveling would mean that Tesla would actually be growing deliveries by 72 if they just stay on the growth trajectory that we saw between Q3 and Q4. That's absolutely phenomenal yet Wall Street isn't paying attention to this.

Wall Street is paying attention to the short-term Trend and quite frankly, the trend is your friend. It makes a lot more sense to be short stocks in this environment that it makes sense to be long stocks in this environment because the trend is your friend. The trend of being short makes sense because we're heading into a recession. However, if you have a long-term mindset, there's some pretty amazing opportunities to pick up inexpensive stocks in my opinion, on companies that are actually growing substantially more than Wall Street is seeing, while at the same time discounting them because of the cyclical trend of moving away from growth and into Staples and things like McDonald's which is shrinking Revenue at a time where we're heading into a recession.

and that's just what people do when they trade. So what did the earnings call tell us in terms of a heads up? Well, here's what the earnings call suggested here: Elon Musk tells us that yeah, demand is a little bit harder than it otherwise would be. specifically not only because the FED is Raising interest rates the way they are, but also because of the recession in China now exacerbated by the Covet Explosion where we're actually seeing Subway ridership plummet year over year, but it's actually started just today, taking back up at least in data released today, so potentially a sign that maybe some of the worst of the Covet surge is behind us. which would be great for China.

We'll talk more about China in just a moment, but Elon Musk here suggests. So yeah, demand is a little harder than it otherwise would be, but I said earlier, we're extremely confident of a great Q4 which this is 18. Sequential growth 72 percent annualized is phenomenal and anticipate continuing growing our vehicle production and deliveries by on average 50 percent a year as far into the future. Sure, as we can see now, that doesn't mean we might not miss that 50 Target in the short term.
In fact, Elon Musk here talks about trying to smooth out deliveries, but one of the difficult issues being hey, we don't have enough cars, trucks, boats, trains, whatever we need to actually get vehicles delivered and that's one of the issues that we see in the difference between production and deliveries here. If we go back to the actual numbers released as Tesla actually produced 439 000 Vehicles we've got about 34 000 vehicles that still need to be delivered if we delivered all of those Vehicles this quarter. Holy smokes, the numbers would have beat phenomenally, but these are already great growth numbers 343 to 405 Phenomenal growth numbers already. But what does Elon tell us about the future? Well take a look at this.

regarding that, 50 annualized growth Elon Musk says the following: We want to focus on a high level about what we think is possible to our best. To the best of our knowledge, we believe that Tesla will continue to grow deliveries in Revenue production at 50 or greater at a compounded annual growth rate. it might occasionally be a year that is a little less, and then some years will maybe be a little more or a lot more. Some of our out-year planning we see the potential annual growth rates in excess of 50.

So in other words the hints were laid in the last earnings call and even in other segments of the sortings call that look Yeah, in the near term we might be slightly below 50, especially on deliveries as Supply chains and delivery. Supply Chains actually catch up with the insane level of production that Tesla is at. But if you just look at the numbers of the actual deliveries and realize we're growing deliveries at a 72 percent annualized rate, Elon's not wrong to say that growth rates in the future, year over year could actually exceed 50, especially when we start looking into the whole of some of the slow times that we saw in 2022. Every single quarter.

Uh, in the last three quarters that Tesla has reported, deliveries have missed. That hopefully sets up for easy beats in 2023. No guarantees, Of course we'll see. But why are we potentially seeing this softness in Tesla? Is it because these vehicles are just so expensive? Is this just a situation where all of a sudden we're selling luxury? Vehicles Is that the problem with Tesla? Well, let's consider this.

When the Model 3 was first introduced, it went into production at a price of thirty five thousand dollars. and at the time in 2017, the average price paid for a car in 2017 was Thirty Four Thousand Nine Hundred Forty Four dollars. Which means the Tesla Model 3 was actually perfectly in line with the average price of a vehicle sold in America. That's not indicative of a luxury car brand.
That's actually indicative statistically of a Model 3 being right in line with the average price of a vehicle in America Today, Thanks to inflation and a lot of money printing, the average car sells for Forty Seven Thousand Six Hundred Ninety Two dollars. The Model 3 today is priced at Forty Six Thousand Nine Hundred Ninety Nine Dollars right before. of course, the Seventy Five Hundred dollar incentive that the US government is now picking up the tab for on Model Threes and Model Y's making the Model 3 actually significantly less expensive than the average price of a vehicle in America. Now some folks argue that oh, but Tesla only had these delivery numbers because they had to aggressively cut pricing.

And while it's true that in China Tesla did have to incentivize demand specifically because not only are we seeing a large property recession in China, but we're probably in a depression as China is releasing itself from the prongs of Covet Zero and finally allowing the economy to try to reopen China's going through quite a bit of a coveted wave and a lot of people aren't traveling or commuting. In fact, consider this tourism is just at 35 of the level of Tourism we saw in China in 2019. just 43 percent of the number of trips have been taken 35 representing uh, tourism spend and movie theater spending is down 46 percent from just last year. Subway ridership is as low as it was in May of this year during substantial, coveted lockdowns.

Now fortunately, we are seeing a little bit of a rise again in Subway ridership, suggesting that maybe Covid in China has finally hit a peak. But yeah, look in China you've got big problems. You've got crematoriums that talk about ordinarily burning 40 bodies per day now burning 140 to 150 bodies per day with bodies stacked up so high that individuals are starting to resort to burying people who have died in their neighborhoods because there's nowhere else to bring them. iPhone City is back at 90 capacity and we're finally actually starting to see China potentially be on the course to a recovery which will probably be substantially beneficial to Tesla And sure, Tesla did discount some of their vehicles 3 750 and then seventy five hundred dollars in December of 2022 here, but now the government is picking up the tab in Q1 and for the next foreseeable years at the same time as Elon Musk has at the very least pledged not to sell any more stock for at least the next year, potentially not until 2025, Which don't kid Yourself by looking at the daily volume of Tesla stock, suggesting that Elon Musk's shares could easily be absorbed by the volume that Tesla trades.

That's wrong. Elon's taking shares that used to be Huddle Shares and selling them actually eradicates a lot of hodler demand for the stock. In fact, Elon sold about 50 percent more than retail actually bought and held on net for Tesla stock. That means even if every single retail buyer bought 50 more Tesla stock in 2022, Elon Musk would have still outsold them.
or I guess Elon Musk In that case, if everybody's bought 50 more, Elon Musk would have still matched every single buy with a cell himself. That puts a lot of downward pressure on the stock, and it's one of the big reasons, in my opinion. We've seen the collapse of Tesla stock valuation as much as we have, but it creates a pretty neat long-term buying opportunity in my opinion, especially when we look and compare to companies like GM. GM has a gross profit margin of just about 13 and a net margin around seven to seven point nine percent.

Tesla earns about the same net income as GM does with about half of the total revenue of GM. That means Tesla has about twice the bottom line margin of GM and about twice the gross margin of GM. In other words, they make twice as much money as GM does. That's remarkable now.

Something else to know is that GM is really only slated to grow between three to maybe six percent each year for the next about four years, whereas Tesla we just saw is delivering cars at a 72 percent annualized growth rate. Even if we just sat at 40 percent growth for the next four years, you're still nearly 10 Xing the growth rate that GM is looking at. So look in a world where McDonald's can shrink revenue and the stock can be flat in a year, and Apple can grow revenue explosively and Tesla can deliver 72 percent more vehicles on an annualized basis quarter over quarter, and these stocks are substantially underperforming. My view is that fundamentals are out the window right now.

The only thing that matters in the stock market is the trend, and that trend is down. That's all that matters. However, that creates a really good opportunity to continue to build my exposure and quantity of ownership to things that I personally value very highly. For example, I just added more shares to an actively managed ETF that has a big allocation to Tesla That way, when Tesla finally gets back to its appropriate fundamental valuation in the future, in my opinion, I believe they're going to be massive capital gains had for stocks or shares bought now in in Tesla or in ETFs that have a large percentage of their allocation dedicated to Tesla and in an ETF, you could be potentially shielded from large capital gains.

And that's because of the amazing tax benefits of ETFs Now, of course, no guarantees, right? I can't provide you personal financial advice even though I am a financial advisor. But I can tell you I'm quite optimistic about the fundamentals that I see for Tesla. Now of course, if it is true that Tesla does have a demand problem, and demand all of a sudden falls off a cliff and Tesla never makes it to actually producing four to five million Vehicles a year, and Tesla doesn't actually get to the the trajectory of being able to produce and sell 10 million Vehicles a year over time in the future Say by 2030 2035. Yeah, then if the growth story is over for Tesla Tesla stock collapses.
But based on the fundamentals that I'm seeing, I personally don't see that whatsoever and again, could be wrong. So no guarantees. But let's look briefly at the Wall Street consensus estimate for earnings per share for Tesla next year. So that's going to put us at an EPS projection for 2023 and we're going to look at the year ended 2023.

So year end 2023. We're looking at about five dollars and 18 cents of expected EPS That's Wall Street consensus. It's five bucks. Let's go with five bucks.

Even at 110 bucks, this stock is trading for 22 times. Again, about half on a P E ratio. If you go out to 2026 at nine bucks a share, this stock is trading for just 12 times, 22 26 earnings. Now go ahead and compare that.

for example, to a company like GM, its multiple is going to be lower. But remember the growth rate for Tesla You have to consider the growth rate for Tesla. If you take 2022 and divide it by a 40 growth rate, you're looking at a PEG ratio of about 0.55 If we do the same thing for GM next year, we'll go ahead and go to an annual estimate for GM And we'll see that the annual 2023 estimate for GM is also about 5.90 per share. And GM stock right now is trading for 33.84 divided by 590 is a P E ratio of only 5.7 But they're only growing at best at five percent over the next four or five years on average.

That puts them at about a PEG ratio twice as high as Tesla. That means right now you are paying twice as much money for a dollar of growth at GM as you are at Tesla. That's incredible. It is incredible how much the Tesla growth story has been discounted by Wall Street And in my opinion, if you can, Huddle boy I'm very optimistic.

that's all. I'll say no guarantees could be wrong. Growth story goes away You're Gonna keep losing lots of money. Growth story stays.

We're gonna look back in five years and go Damn wish I bought more! Thanks so much for watching If you want to Shadow me on a flight as we go look for real estate, you want to join me on my private jet as we go hunt for Real Estate across the country. Check out the link down below and you can join me. We'll take you to a destination we'll explore real estate and get to ask me questions and learn real estate with me. Just use that coupon code link down below.

Thanks so much and we'll see the next one. Goodbye.

By Stock Chat

where the coffee is hot and so is the chat

34 thoughts on “The tesla stock implosion.”
  1. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Larry Jones says:

    This video did not age well, ” Paniccuts” for Tesla in Shanghai today- You figure out why ..

    The ”Teslanarrative” has changed, now a lot of people dont want to be linked to Musk,
    something numbercrunchers cant understand.
    Even though numbers are starting to get destroyed as well.
    63 usd rebound target then 29 usd end of 2023, short since 288 usd.

    Good luck buying the ”dip”

  2. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Rodiculous says:

    Kevin I don't wanna be that guy but what makes you think you are part of the 3% that can beat the market? Short term gains aren't proof, of long term success, btw. Just buy index funds and hodl imo

  3. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Patrick Searcey says:

    Tesla is innovative, made in America, huge growth + profits, pushing solar/battery technology, pushing driving software, changed the way cars are being bought and built, and their cars are amazing having just gotten one.

    Sucks that Elon’s twitter takeover shenanigans and recent right wing tweets are making both lefties and right wing media hate him. OG car builders, Anti Elon left, and pro oil and gas right all bashing Tesla make for a bad combination.

    I think Tesla should be way higher and will continue to grow and innovate, I just hope the things I mentioned and Elon’s recent craziness doesn’t kill the company!

    Hopefully he will find a good Twitter CEO, make former VW head the CEO of Tesla for operational stability, and he can focus on SpaceX and improving Tesla as an engineer. That’s what most people loved about Elon, when he was focused on the science/engineering and pushing the boundaries of technology.

  4. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars D L says:

    MM got the call from the deep state. You can’t unleash the lies from the dems and FBI and expect not to be hit.

  5. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars hockeyhalod says:

    My question is, are Tesla owners going to buy a new one with more EV vehicles coming out? If there isn't customer loyalty, then they may fizzle out when finally facing competition. TSLA will likely move into the same position as other car manufactures. Paying dividends on profits because the growth dies and they hit a standard sales.

  6. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Tristan Prathap says:

    .

  7. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Registration Account says:

    Just more "hopium" nonsense from a big tsla bag holder. TSLA has always been overvalued. It's still got a ways to go down to its real valuation. Other auto makers are or are fast becoming "tech companies" as well. And self driving isn't helpful when it takes more effort just to monitor if its gonna take you out all the time. Irs decades away from practicality.

  8. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars TK says:

    TSLA is going to grow at 30% for 2023-2027 not 40 bro lol

  9. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Healthy Growth says:

    You say walstreet thinks value is better at the moment and they have no clue yet you purposely chose to get wrecked by taking the other side… Yeah all of walstreet is clueless but Kevin is not lololol

  10. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars PW says:

    Lots of stories of bad batteries in winter this year 🎉

  11. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars PW says:

    Supercharger network is literally just a bunch of plug ins. That’s all it is. Others are building plugins also

  12. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Jean-Marc Aiello says:

    Very impressive and informative video, Tesla have the same News and Stock missleading then in 2016-2019, and then in Januar 2020 it start to explode

  13. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Aptera Challenge says:

    You want to talk about fundamentals? There's a fundamental difference between McDonalds on the one hand, and Apple and Tesla on the other hand. McDonalds sells consumable products. Everybody needs to eat every single day, and McDonalds has built an income stream by tapping into that market, a market that remains more or less constant as long as busy people need to buy fast food on the run at a familiar location. Apple and Tesla on the other hand, sell hardware which while it is technically consumable as it does eventually need to be replaced, does not need to be replaced and repurchased every single day. Rather, with Apple, it might be every year to 3 years for an iPhone, for Tesla it might be once every 10 years. The problem with this type of product is that no matter how big a slice of the market a company has (and Tesla and Apple are both leaders in their respective markets), eventually there are only so many phones or cars they can sell. If you have a phone and it works, you don't need to buy another phone. If you have a Tesla and you like it, you don't need to buy another one for a year or two. Even if you are wealthy enough and motivated enough to replace your car every year, the car that you just replaced goes into the used car marketplace and is bought by somebody else who then doesn't need to buy a new Tesla, thus denying Tesla the opportunity of another sale. I think the reason why both Apple and Tesla are crashing right now is that both products are reaching market saturation. Apple has plenty of competition from Android phones too, and while the Tesla fanboys may deny it, Tesla too has competition, maybe not in the way that fanboys define competition, which is other EV's, but there is competition from used cars, both ICE cars and EV's and there is also saturation in the sense that once you have a car, of any kind, even if it's a 10 year old Toyota, as long as that car is reliable, you have no need to splash out on a $55k purchase just because it's there. Even if you finance it, in a recession, who needs to take on a car payment of hundreds of dollars a month just because you want the latest and greatest EV? In a sense, Tesla is its own worst enemy, because they have made over 3 million cars now, and are incessantly ramping up production, flooding the market with even more and more Teslas. Sooner or later, everyone who wants a Tesla will have already bought one. Maybe we haven't reached that point in 2023, but even if market saturation is still 5 years away, what then? Perhaps Tesla growth has already been priced in for the next 5 years. I'm not saying the stock won't recover from its current low, but how high can it possibly go from here? $300 to $400 tops in my opinion.

  14. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Hola! Whynotstart usingyourbrain says:

    On March 1st Tesla will anounce the end of all competition and people are selling their shares.

  15. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Rommel Lagera says:

    Why nobody discuss that Tesla is now only 3rd in China EV unit sales, behind BYD and SAIC.

    All these valuation based on number of cars produced by Tesla does not hold water anymore. Competitions at both lower and higher price point are here and will eventually cut on current Tesla market shares.

    It is very difficult to say global sales will jump, due to lack of charging infrastructure. EV growth will remain in North America and Europe. We will see limited growth on the rest of the world for at least another decade.

  16. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars James H says:

    I'm confused, is Kevin's PP up or down?

  17. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars WholeCoinNerd says:

    McDonalds pays a dividend. Tesla pays fomo.

    McDonald’s that were built years ago are now sitting on premium lots. Like on the beach in San Diego. They’re also a real estate property company. Few realize the wealth McDonald’s holds in real estate to weather a very long storm.

    Tesla will weather this storm with cars not selling, piling up, and factories closing down.

    Recession will be bad for premium car sales.

    Wait until the Tesla price markdown spiral

    Elon bragged that he didn’t need to lower prices on Tesla or advertise. He’s now doing both!

  18. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars William Jarvis says:

    Tesla is a buy in $50 to$75 range! Demand will continue to decline in the near term due to economic favctors.

  19. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Lazy JustGo says:

    90 tomorrow

  20. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars C B says:

    Haven’t you noticed ever since Elon took over Twitter seems like news outlets are bashing Elon and Tesla any chance they get? The left is mad right now with Elon it looks like lol. Especially the Wall Street journal . Doesn’t Elons boy Jeff bezos own that? Is it odd that they’re reporting misleading news articles with misleading headlines? I see a lot of fire on Elon right now lol. My wild prediction is buddy goes bankrupt during this recession but then again he is Elon and I can see him raising money until things are fixed. He took on too much Twitter was and is a bad idea.

  21. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Mike says:

    China's reopening wasnt what caused the covid wave, it was the opposite, the covid wave forced them to open as they lost control of the virus.
    The Chinese vaccines aren't effective against omicron

  22. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Mike says:

    Everything Kevin says here makes sense especially deliveries growth quarter by quarter.
    Unfortunately the trade when you miss expectations is short which also makes sense.
    Not a big deal long term

  23. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Lars Nyström says:

    The Wall Street hasn't really grasped the effect of going from ICE to BEV!

    Yes, the car market will fall. The high interests on car loans makes sure of that.
    But the BEV market won't fall. Most car buyers know that's what they should buy, if they can afford a new car.

    This will only speed up the transition to BEV, since the ICE market is the shrinking one.

    Teslas market will be those who are whealthy enough to manage the financing problems. Its a big enough market for the current Tesla production.

    The only completion Tesla has are the Chinese. That market is now better for cheaper cars. It will take a while for the economy there to recover.

    Later on, the Chinese will start exporting their BEV. Thats when Tesla will face real competition. But by then, we are iut of the recession.

    But why do people buy Plug-in hybrids?
    Don't they understand that maintenance of them are going to be a major problem compared to BEV?

  24. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Pietro Valsecchi says:

    New SEC filing shows Elon just sold another 50 million TSLA shares…he just realized if he waits another day, he'll be getting 50% less compared to what he got for them today. Funny how he's been telling TSLA employees not to focus on the TSLA stock price!

  25. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Blade - ⚔️ says:

    And this is why I appreciate you. This is the type of analysis I’m looking for. Thanks you for this 👍🏾👍🏾👍🏾

  26. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Vicky Kennel says:

    NEVER buying TSLA. LCID AND RIVN are better bets. tesla will only grow 30%, these two will grow 200% a year!!!!

  27. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Vicky Kennel says:

    Kevin is a self serving manipulating HOLE! He said buy TTCF! Buy TSLA? Really!!! Go stuff you head in elons back side!

  28. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Vicky Kennel says:

    Kevin, go stuff your head in a toilet and flush it!!! Manipulating self serving tesla biatKTCh! You need to be in JAIL!!!!

  29. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars alanexpro says:

    Tesla has shown its true nature, just yet another car maker, thus its valuation should be inline with the rest of the auto industry.

  30. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars dustin hatch says:

    Propping up ARKK?

  31. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Karaoke Vic says:

    Did no one see that Tesla that went off a cliff and the emergency recovery on TV? I bet that was half of the selling today.

  32. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Realty Rewind says:

    It’s political

  33. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Larry Jones says:

    Rewiew this video in 6 months and you will see how much bs this was…

  34. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Gamer Dell says:

    How long will it take for tesla to reach all time highs?

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