Tesla may keep cutting prices in 'turbulent
times', Musk says
By Akash
Sriram and Hyunjoo Jin
July 20,
20239:09 AM GMT+2Updated a day ago
July 19
(Reuters) - Tesla (TSLA.O) CEO Elon Musk signalled on Wednesday that he would
cut prices again on electric vehicles in "turbulent times", even as
his all-out price war on automaker rivals squeezes the company's own margins.
The company
has slashed prices several times in the United States, China and other markets
since late last year, and increased discounts and other incentives to reduce
inventory, as it tries to shield against competition and economic uncertainty.
"One
day it seems like the world economy is falling apart, next day it's fine. I
don't know what the hell is going on," Musk told analysts on a conference
call. "We're in, I would call it, turbulent times."
Tesla
shares, which had been largely flat after hours, fell nearly 5% after Musk's
comments.
The large
price cuts have pressured Tesla's automotive gross margin, a closely watched
indicator in the industry, but Musk has said Tesla would sacrifice margin to
drive volume growth.
He said so
again on Wednesday: "I think it makes it does make sense to sacrifice
margins in favor of making more vehicles," adding that if macroeconomic
conditions were not stable, Tesla would have to lower prices.
As an
example, Tesla this year cut U.S. prices of its Model Y long-range version by a
quarter to $50,490.
Tesla's
quarterly automotive gross margin, excluding regulatory credits, fell to 18.1%
in the second quarter from 19% in the first quarter, according to Reuters'
calculations. That was in line with Street estimates, but a far cry from the
26% it reported a year earlier.
Tesla
reported overall gross margin of 18.2% for the April-June period, the lowest in
16 quarters.
Earlier,
Tesla said in a statement it was focusing on reducing costs and on new product
development, and that the "challenges of these uncertain times are not
over."
"Multiple
rounds of aggressive price cuts has put Tesla in a position of strength after
building its EV castle and now is set to further monetize its success,"
Wedbush analysts said in a note.
Tesla
reiterated its expectations of achieving deliveries of around 1.8 million
vehicles this year, but said production in the third quarter would decrease
slightly due to planned downtimes for factory upgrades.
"It's
a fine line," said Thomas Martin, a portfolio manager at Globalt
Investments, which holds Tesla stock.
"They
are trying to get the prices right so they can generate the demand for the
units, and then they like to run their factories as efficiently as they can ...
they don't want to build up those inventories."
Lower
pricing, along with government tax breaks for EV buyers in the United States
and elsewhere, drove Tesla's deliveries to a record 466,000 vehicles in the
April-July period globally, but ate into its profitability.
Still, on
an adjusted basis, Tesla earned 91 cents per share, on the strength of non-core
income and largely in line revenue $24.93 billion. Analysts had expected a
profit of 82 cents per share, according to Refinitiv.
FSD LICENSE
Musk said
on the call that Tesla was in talks with a major original equipment
manufacturer to license its "full self driving" (FSD) software but
did not name the company. He had previously said the company was open to
licensing the driver-assistance system.
FSD does
not make the car autonomous and requires driver supervision, and Tesla is under
regulatory security following a number of crashes involving its vehicles.
Last year,
Musk said the world's most valuable car maker would be "worth basically
zero" without achieving full self-driving capability.
Tesla's
stock received a big boost this year after Ford Motor (F.N), General Motors
(GM.N) and a raft of other automakers and EV charging firms said they would
adopt Tesla's charging technology.
The
company's stock has risen 60% since the first such deal on May 25. So far this
year it is up 138%, helped also by expanded federal credits for Model 3s and
investor excitement over artificial intelligence.
The company
said on Wednesday that lower raw-material costs and government tax credits
helped reduce cost-per-vehicle but that it saw an increase in operating
expenses driven by Cybertruck, AI projects, and the production ramp of 4680
battery cells that are key to making cheaper and compelling EVs.
Tesla
benefited from $150 million to $250 million in tax credits in the second
quarter, it said, while receiving similar benefits from lower raw material
costs such as lithium and aluminum.
Tesla said
on Wednesday it had made "notable progress" on yield improvement of
its 4680 cell production lines and increased production in Texas by 80% in the
second quarter from the first.
In 2020,
Musk unveiled a plan to produce Tesla's own EV batteries called
"4680" cells. But the carmaker has struggled to meet Musk's targets
for production and performance of the cells.
Tesla said
production of the long-delayed electric pickup Cybertruck remained on track for
initial deliveries this year.
Akash
Sriram
Thomson
Reuters
Akash
reports on technology companies in the United States, electric vehicle
companies, and the space industry. His reporting usually appears in the Autos
& Transportation and Technology sections. He has a postgraduate degree in
Conflict, Development, and Security from the University of Leeds. Akash's
interests include music, football (soccer), and Formula 1.


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