What I learned from a shopping trip with Dan Ives, Wall Street’s biggest Tesla bull and the funkiest dresser on cable news
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I went shopping with Dan Ives, the tech bull, outspoken Tesla supporter, and fashion icon.
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Ives said clothing has unintentionally become a part of his brand.
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Between looking at tie-dye and neon sweatshirts, I saw how Ives’ style is mirrored in his stock calls.
When I saw a man walking down Prince Street in canary yellow pants, a bright blue Aviator Nation sweatshirt, custom sneakers, and a hat that said “GOAT,” I knew my wait was over.
I was meeting up with Dan Ives, who isn’t just a well-known tech analyst and major Tesla bull, but also something of a fashion icon. CNBC is used to guys in Brooks Brothers, but when Ives is on, it’s Lilly Pulitzer blazers and lots of hot pink. During our SoHo shopping excursion, Ives didn’t look twice at anything in a neutral tone. My white T-shirt, medium-wash vintage jeans, and simple jewelry quickly started to feel like a bad choice.
Ives ran his hands through button-downs in Faherty, the first store we went to, while explaining that he’s dressed “super different and funky” since he was a kid in Long Island. He eventually landed on a $58 powder blue hat that said “SOHO SURF,” even though he was already wearing a hat and holding another one from where he’d gone to lunch. We walked slowly, Ives swinging the paper shopping bag and occasionally checking stocks or texts on his phone.
Ives told me he tends to wear Vuori or Lululemon at home, and that Aviator Nation is a go-to, but he didn’t take me to any of those places. Instead, he led us farther downtown to Snow Milk, where he recently launched a fashion line. Maybe I shouldn’t have been surprised that our afternoon turned into something of a business opportunity. Ives told me his sense of style is authentic, but it’s also helped boost his brand, especially on social media.
“It’s definitely played a role in the global success, because of the way that I dress,” he told me. “Even people who don’t know my stock calls, they know me as the person who wears the funky shirts on CNBC.”
The brand ties go beyond recognition online and on the street.
Ives is as bullish on tech stocks as he is on clothing. In addition to Tesla, he’s one of Wall Street’s biggest optimists when it comes to mega-cap titans like Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia, and Palantir. Any sell-off in these names is usually followed by a research note from Ives imploring investors to buy the dip.
But his most outspoken moments involve the EV maker. You might remember when Elon Musk told Ives to “shut up” earlier this year, after the Wedbush Securities analyst said Tesla’s board needed to have “oversight on political endeavors.” It was out of character for Ives, who usually gives Tesla an “outperform” rating. (He told me thinks Musk has “pivoted very nicely” since.)