the CP, nor any other (current) company literature makes mention of valuation, other than yes Taylor's $10B.
the closest reasonable amateur's number I could come up with was around $45/share, here .
Even in these days of $3.2 Billion thermostats, and $19 Billion dumb ass iPhone apps, those are -- to me -- outliers, extremes of valuation that came to fruition due to forces outside the market.
(imo) baldly tossing out $650/share target (with no meat as to how that can be achieved) for a venture stock is irresponsible fantasy.
sorry if you feel otherwise, but suggesting the possibility of a sixty-five-thousand-percent gain is too far past the post to be grounded in reality.
curious: has there *ever* been such a degree of return for any public stock, ever?
the highest-returning stock I could find for the last almost 25 years was KSU (Kansas City Southern Railway), at a little over nineteen-thousand percent since April of 1992.
thanks,
R.