“GigaFactory” Sputters

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Tesla and Panasonic Corp. are tempering expansion plans for the massive battery factory they’ve plugged billions into the last few years, deepening concerns about demand for the carmaker’s electric vehicles.

Tesla shares fell 2.8 percent to close at $268.42 on Thursday, extending their drop this year to 20 percent. A record decline in deliveries during the first quarter stoked concerns about slackening demand for the Model 3, the company’s newest and least-expensive car. While CEO Elon Musk last week reiterated a forecast for 360,000 to 400,000 vehicle deliveries in 2019, investors remain “cautious” given its history of missing ambitious projections.

“The environment for Tesla is getting tougher and there are question marks on Tesla’s ability to deliver sustainable profits,” said Sven Diermeier, a Frankfurt-based analyst at Independent Research GmbH. “Other major manufacturers are readying their own electric lineups, and are able to cross-finance battery cars with the higher returns from combustion-engine cars.”

Tesla and Panasonic had intended to raise capacity at the so called “gigafactory” by about 50 percent by 2020, but financial problems forced a re-think, the Nikkei said, without citing its sources. Panasonic also intends to suspend planned investment in Tesla’s battery and electric vehicle plant in Shanghai, and instead provide technical support and a small number of batteries from the existing gigafactory, the newspaper reported.

Tesla’s financial strength has been a concern for investors. The company had to pay off a $920 million convertible bond in February, which ate into the about $3.7 billion of cash and equivalents it held at the end of last year.

5 COMMENTS

  1. “The environment for Tesla is getting tougher and there are question marks on Tesla’s ability to deliver sustainable profits,” said Sven Diermeier

    Ummm, I don’t believe they’ve ever delivered a profit (by standard accounting practices), let alone “sustainable” profits.

  2. Tesla’s CEO Pay Ratio Hits
    Stratosphere With $2.28 Billion Grant:

    Tesla Inc. can add another superlative to its collection: The carmaker’s reported CEO-to-worker pay ratio is the biggest on record.

    Elon Musk’s billion-dollar moonshot pay deal that shareholders approved last year resulted in a staggering 40,668-to-1 ratio, which compares the CEO’s $2.28 billion of stock options to the pay of the median worker, who received $56,163 in 2018.

    https://www.bloomberg.com/graphics/ceo-pay-ratio/#TSLA

    Of course that’s all a stock option, so in theory it won’t pay out. But so many Wall Streeters are invested that they’ll do what they can to keep the stock up, despite Elon’s gaffes of late. Last thing they want is another Theranos on their books, especially at the valuation of Tesla now.

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