Technology

Elon Musk says people can now buy a Tesla with bitcoin

Tesla, led by Elon Musk, confirmed that it purchased about $ 1.5 billion in bitcoin in January and expects to start accepting it as a payment in the future.

Artur Widak | NurPhoto | Getty Images

Tesla CEO Elon Musk announced late Tuesday that it is now possible to buy Tesla vehicles in the U.S. with bitcoin.

The automaker last month revealed that it had bought $1.5 billion worth of bitcoin and that it would soon start accepting the world’s most popular cryptocurrency as a form of payment.

“You can now buy a Tesla with Bitcoin,” tweeted Musk, who was officially made the “Technoking of Tesla” this month.

People outside the U.S. will be able to buy a Tesla with bitcoin “later this year,” Musk said, without specifying which countries.

In order to accept the payment, Musk said Tesla is using “internal” and “open source software.”

He added that Tesla “operates bitcoin nodes directly.” Nodes are computers on bitcoin’s network that work to verify transactions and avoid the cryptocurrency from being spent twice.

Musk embraces bitcoin

Musk has embraced bitcoin more than any other major tech CEO. He has been tweeting about the cryptocurrency on and off over the last few months, raising alarm bells in some corners. He’s also been tweeting about other coins like ether and dogecoin.

Daniel Ives, an analyst at Wedbush, told CNBC last month that Tesla’s share price is now directly tied to the value of bitcoin.

“Musk is now tied to the bitcoin story in the eyes of the Street and although Tesla made a billion paper profit in its first month owning the digital gold, it comes with added risk,” Ives told CNBC via email.

Tesla’s share price and the value of bitcoin have seen huge gains over the last 12 months, with Tesla shares rising from around $100 to over $600, and bitcoin rising from around $7,000 to over $55,000.

Some investors, however, are convinced that Tesla and bitcoin are both in bubble territory.

Lansdowne Partners fund manager Per Lekander told CNBC last week that he thinks Tesla is in a bubble and that he’s short on Elon Musk’s firm, meaning he will profit if the value of Tesla’s stock falls.

Tesla’s market value soared to over $800 billion in the 12 months leading up to January, before dropping to less than $600 billion in February. It now stands at around $635 billion.

Tesla’s shares were up around 0.6% in after hours trading Tuesday, after closing at $662.16. The price of bitcoin is at $55,444.93.

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