New Delhi, March 5 -- Figuring out how Wall Street analysts value Tesla stock is about as hard as determining why a Tesla Cybertruck looks the way it does.

There are endless ways to value stocks, including: multiples of sales; net income; earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization, or Ebitda; and book value. As well as sum-of-the-parts, or SOTP, valuations, which try to value each business segment within a corporation separately.

SOTP valuations are popular with Tesla as analysts look to value hard-to-value AI-related businesses, including robo-taxis and humanoid robots, along with the core electric-vehicle and energy-storage businesses.

The problem for investors is that Wall Street's numbers for each of Tesla's bu...