they will be the next Delorean
Porsche, Honda, Volvo, & Jaguar will put them out of their misery soon enough
Porsche, Honda, Volvo, & Jaguar will put them out of their misery soon enough
LCE said:
Endo Ag. You have been fooled by Elon Musk. I don't own a Tesla but know 4 people who do and express the same satisfaction. Musk is a wizard
Quote:
Cantrell: "Elon really doesn't care about the money he wants to go to Mars. It was always focused on Mars, none of this was focused on the market. I was the guy who had the market focus, and I was like, 'Hey, look Elon, we've got to have a return on investment.' His response to me was, 'I don't really give a damn about return on investment.'"
DFWag84 said:
they will be the next Delorean
Porsche, Honda, Volvo, & Jaguar will put them out of their misery soon enough
Gordo14 said:LCE said:
Endo Ag. You have been fooled by Elon Musk. I don't own a Tesla but know 4 people who do and express the same satisfaction. Musk is a wizard
If your first logical fallacy doesn't work out, might as well try another one. From red herring to straw man.
Let me try. I'm glad people like the car, but it's really thanks to the tax payers and the charitable donors... "investors" that the car that Elon designed every bolt of to exist.
I mean seriously how ridiculous is that... I don't think you receive Amazon in the mail and say praise Jesus Bezos who single-handedly built the logistics network that is Amazon - it's an "amazing" service though even when it's not being serviced for 3 months.
Margins are collapsing on this car - especially now that the pool of people who want to tell their friends they paid $60k for a $35k car is more or less exhausted. $1.5B in debt obligations are due this year in cash, and we're starting multibillion dollar investments in 3+ product lines (allegedly) while going operationally cash flow negative (from the corresponding margins). It's no wonder this growth company is laying off 7% of the workforce while dropping their prices twice in 30 days into a pool of limitless demand.
In all seriousness, I hope people that own the car like it - i wish them no ill will. I'm personally not going to spend that kind of money on a depreciating asset that's function is to get me from point A to point B even though I can afford it. Nor do I like the idea of being limited by the mediocre energy density of batteries. It's still not affordable enough to be a mass market car, and people renters, particularly apartment renters, will struggle to justify purchasing an EV.
DFWag84 said:
they will be the next Delorean
Porsche, Honda, Volvo, & Jaguar will put them out of their misery soon enough
Gordo14 said:
Yes I do. The Model 3 has always been the fabled $35k car. Sure people overpaid for some amenities and also paid thousands of dollars of dumb money for a product that doesn't exist ("full self driving"). These people were always going to convince themselves it's the best car ever made. The average sales price in Q3 & Q4 was ~$60k - again for a car marketed as a $35k car... And that's great, until that entire market dries up. Which it clearly did at the end of Q4. That's why there's an attempt at a mid-range variant, significant layoffs, and 2 price drops have all happened recently. Clearly margins are falling apart due to a lack of demand. They still can't sell a car even near $35k and make money, and they can't sell the current car ASP in enough volume at current prices without 2.5 years of pent up demand. It has nothing to do with how happy customers are bringing up their car in every conversation or internet forum they possibly can (I do really appreciate the people who say something like, "drove it 100 miles before the computer crashed and my car shut down... Amazing car though"). That's yesterday's news and no longer relevant to the solvency of Tesla.
Honestly though, I see the appeal of the acceleration you get in a Tesla. That being said, their owners often have a cult like attitude of forgiveness for the inexcusable. Whether it's, months of service time, terrible paint jobs, panel gaps, etc. Owners seem to be happy to tell themselves it's ok as long as my car has the capability of making fart noises.
Quote:
Model 3 GAAP and non-GAAP gross margin remained stable at >20% in Q4
Quote:
Our operating margin also improved significantly in the second half of 2018, changing from being negative to on-par with other premium carmakers. Despite margins in the automotive industry typically being lower in Q4, that was not true for us as our operating margin remained strong at 5.7% in Q4. Our GAAP net income of $139 million was impacted by a non-cash charge of $54 million attributable to non-controlling interests. Free cash flow (operating cash flow less capital expenditures) also improved sequentially in Q4 to $910 million. In the second half of 2018, our cash position improved by $1.45 billion despite the scheduled repayment of a $230 million convertible bond in Q4. We have sufficient cash on hand to comfortably settle in cash our convertible bond that will mature in March 2019
Quote:
As we improve the production rate of Model 3, the cost per vehicle continues to decline. It is critical that we continue this trend so that we can keep increasing the affordability of Model 3 while retaining a sustainable level of profitability. The labor hours per Model 3 vehicle declined yet again by roughly 20% compared to Q3 and by about 65% in the second half of 2018 alone. Despite introducing a lower-priced mid-range variant and other headwinds, Model 3's gross margin remained stable in Q4 at over 20%.
Quote:
http://ir.tesla.com/static-files/0b913415-467d-4c0d-be4c-9225c2cb0ae0
Free cash flow (operating cash
flow less capital expenditures) also improved sequentially in Q4 to $910
million. In the second half of 2018, our cash position improved by $1.45
billion despite the scheduled repayment of a $230 million convertible
bond in Q4. We have sufficient cash on hand to comfortably settle in
cash our convertible bond that will mature in March 2019.
Fizban said:Gordo14 said:
Yes I do. The Model 3 has always been the fabled $35k car. Sure people overpaid for some amenities and also paid thousands of dollars of dumb money for a product that doesn't exist ("full self driving"). These people were always going to convince themselves it's the best car ever made. The average sales price in Q3 & Q4 was ~$60k - again for a car marketed as a $35k car... And that's great, until that entire market dries up. Which it clearly did at the end of Q4. That's why there's an attempt at a mid-range variant, significant layoffs, and 2 price drops have all happened recently. Clearly margins are falling apart due to a lack of demand. They still can't sell a car even near $35k and make money, and they can't sell the current car ASP in enough volume at current prices without 2.5 years of pent up demand. It has nothing to do with how happy customers are bringing up their car in every conversation or internet forum they possibly can (I do really appreciate the people who say something like, "drove it 100 miles before the computer crashed and my car shut down... Amazing car though"). That's yesterday's news and no longer relevant to the solvency of Tesla.
Honestly though, I see the appeal of the acceleration you get in a Tesla. That being said, their owners often have a cult like attitude of forgiveness for the inexcusable. Whether it's, months of service time, terrible paint jobs, panel gaps, etc. Owners seem to be happy to tell themselves it's ok as long as my car has the capability of making fart noises.
No, Tesla has always said that they plan to eventually produce a $35k version of the Model 3. The versions they are selling right now are higher-end and more expensive cars than the 35k version. This isn't really hard to wrap your head around.
When someone buys a BMW M3 they are not buying a 330i.
Margins are not collapsing:Quote:
Model 3 GAAP and non-GAAP gross margin remained stable at >20% in Q4
andQuote:
Our operating margin also improved significantly in the second half of 2018, changing from being negative to on-par with other premium carmakers. Despite margins in the automotive industry typically being lower in Q4, that was not true for us as our operating margin remained strong at 5.7% in Q4. Our GAAP net income of $139 million was impacted by a non-cash charge of $54 million attributable to non-controlling interests. Free cash flow (operating cash flow less capital expenditures) also improved sequentially in Q4 to $910 million. In the second half of 2018, our cash position improved by $1.45 billion despite the scheduled repayment of a $230 million convertible bond in Q4. We have sufficient cash on hand to comfortably settle in cash our convertible bond that will mature in March 2019
andQuote:
As we improve the production rate of Model 3, the cost per vehicle continues to decline. It is critical that we continue this trend so that we can keep increasing the affordability of Model 3 while retaining a sustainable level of profitability. The labor hours per Model 3 vehicle declined yet again by roughly 20% compared to Q3 and by about 65% in the second half of 2018 alone. Despite introducing a lower-priced mid-range variant and other headwinds, Model 3's gross margin remained stable in Q4 at over 20%.
http://ir.tesla.com/static-files/0b913415-467d-4c0d-be4c-9225c2cb0ae0
As Tesla continues to improve their processes and drive their costs down they will continue to cut their prices and introduce lower margin lower-end vehicles. This has always been their plan and they have been totally open about that.
Fizban said:
So again, we are left to believe that either Tesla is perpetrating criminal fraud on a massive scale and that most of its executives will soon be in jail... or that maybe their financials/auditors/etc are basically correct and this car company is shockingly enough building and selling cars.
I would be surprised if their quarterlies are audited, but even audited annuals don't give me much comfort. Enron's were audited as have been many others who failed. More than a few audit opinions have been purchased.Endo Ag said:
I'll add very little here. I will say that I own a Model 3 Performance, and it is absolutely, hands down, the best car I've ever owned. I'm just home after letting a friend drive it. This friend has a Lambo, a mid seventies Stingray, a Slingshot, and several other high value cars, and in his words, "That was an expensive few minutes." I've got a hundred bucks he buys one in less than a few weeks. He can afford it.
I've followed the bull argument, and the bear argument. I outgrew my ambitions to pick stocks long ago, so as long as they honor my warranty, I don't have a financial dog in the fight. I find it interesting the argument about unsold cars, false reporting of sales and profits etc, when the registrations are public, the quarterlies are audited, and I see the cars driving all over. I do think there is a ton of emotion on both sides, and I think a lot of rich people will get richer on both sides, and those who get their talking points from Twitter will get burned in the middle.
Tread carefully out there folks. Most of us are guppies, and the sharks are always hungry.
TennAg said:Fizban said:
So again, we are left to believe that either Tesla is perpetrating criminal fraud on a massive scale and that most of its executives will soon be in jail... or that maybe their financials/auditors/etc are basically correct and this car company is shockingly enough building and selling cars.
You're always forced into a choice with this company, which says more to you?
1/2019 Tesla: "2019 demand to increase over 50%"
or
1/2019 Tesla lays of 2/3rds of vehicle delivery staff
TennAg said:
Any competent company with plenty of demand would maintain US operations as-is and gradually add overseas capacity. After all there's almost no infrastructure in place.
After all, the "dinosaur" auto companies make dozens of models/variants and ship them all over the world at extreme efficiency. There's no merit to this story line.
Quote:
Tesla shares got off to the week with a good start after Canaccord Genuity upgraded the stock and predicted a monster rally as electric vehicle penetration improves and the company gets closer to building a car that is affordable for the masses.
Canaccord upgraded Tesla to buy from hold and raised its 12-month price target to $450 from $330.
"The EV penetration story is underappreciated by the Street," analyst Jed Dorsheimer said in a note to clients Monday. "We see a more stable 2019 with far fewer concerns for investors in the company."
...
"We view the recent string of price cuts as further proof that the cost cutting and right sizing that the company has undertaken are resulting in concrete movement towards the ultimate goal of an affordable $35,000 Model 3," Dorsheimer said. "With the strong operating cash flow generation of $1.23B and cash on the balance sheet of $3.7B, the liquidity concerns and convertible note repayment are no longer valid concerns in our view."
Quote:
Tesla's delivery team said to be gutted in recent job cuts
"There are not enough deliveries," one of the former employees told Reuters. "You don't need a team because there are not that many cars coming through."
https://www.cnbc.com/2019/02/09/teslas-model-3-worries-delivery-employees-said-to-be-cut.html
"Meant to say."TennAg said:
Summary of what lead to today's contempt filing:
1. Last week, Elon lies on twitter
2. Hours later, Tesla's general counsel made him fix the statement and retweet.
3. Tesla GC promptly quits company.
4. Sec files because pre-approval process re material statements not being followed.
The first time there's been any attempt at internal controls that i've seen (apparently didn't go well). SEC finally grows a pair too.
for reference