Uber’s IPO is expected to raise $9 billion. Photo via Uber. Uber and Lyft drivers across the globe are planning a walk out Wednesday to protest working conditions and wages, the Washington Post reports. The strike, planned ahead of Uber’s Friday initial public offering (IPO), is being backed by the New York Taxi Workers Alliance.… Continue reading Ride-Hailing Drivers Plan Strike
Category: News Site
Paris Officials Select Ubeeqo to Manage New On-Street Parking
the City of Paris selected four service providers to operate this Mobilib service: Ubeeqo, Drivy, Communauto, and Ada. Photo via Max Pexels. For the creation of its new Mobilib service, the City of Paris has charged Ubeeqo with management of 850 on-street parking spaces with or without charging stations, following calls for tenders. These new… Continue reading Paris Officials Select Ubeeqo to Manage New On-Street Parking
GrabWheels launches scooter subscription for food deliveries
The scooters can be picked up at close to 30 locations across Singapore for S$75 (US$55.05) per month. Go to Source
A closer look at Go-Jek’s huge growth numbers
Tech in Asia obtains the Indonesian firm’s financial data that sheds light on how it calculates its key metric. Go to Source
As IPO looms, Uber clings to hard-knuckled tactics in pursuit of growth
SAN FRANCISCO/ CAPE TOWN (Reuters) – Uber co-founder and former CEO Travis Kalanick used to tell investors he liked to keep his company teetering between order and chaos. A traffic official checks an impounded Uber vehicle during a clampdown on drivers operating without permits in Cape Town, South Africa, May 4, 2019. REUTERS/Sumaya Hisham By… Continue reading As IPO looms, Uber clings to hard-knuckled tactics in pursuit of growth
Waymo plans final assembly on self-driving cars in Detroit; will need 100-400 workers
Original Article
Elon Musk to investors: Self-driving will make Tesla a $500 billion company
Elon Musk, chief executive officer of Tesla Inc., smiles while speaking to members of the media outside federal court in New York, U.S., on Thursday, April 4, 2019.Natan Dvir | Bloomberg | Getty ImagesCitigroup and Goldman Sachs, who are underwriting Tesla's latest effort to raise $2 billion in new funds, held a “broad investor call” on Thursday, where CEO Elon Musk and CFO Zach Kirkhorn answered brokers' questions about their plans for the electric vehicle maker.
According to two invitees who attended the call, CEO Elon Musk talked up Tesla's self-driving strategy right off the bat, expanding what he and other execs said at a recent event for investors that the company dubbed “Autonomy Day. ”
Musk confidently told investors on the call that autonomous driving will transform Tesla into a company with a $500 billion market cap, these people said. Its current market cap stands around $42 billion. He also said that existing Teslas will increase in value as self-driving capabilities are added via software, and will be worth up to $250,000 within three years.
The call came as the company is looking to raise $650 million in equity and $1.35 billion in convertible bonds. Filings indicate that Tesla plans to use the capital for general corporate purposes. On the call, Musk said Tesla would be able to fund its business needs through cash flow, but that it was wise to have a buffer in case of a recession or weak global auto demand.
Kirkhorn reminded investors on the call that nothing has changed in Tesla's outlook for Q2. The company still expects to deliver 90,000 to 100,000 vehicles in the second quarter, and 360,000 to 400,000 vehicles total this year.
On an unadjusted basis, Tesla lost $702.1 million, or $4.10 a share, during the first quarter of 2019. The company's shares rose more than 4% on Thursday following the announcement of the new funding solicitation, but remain down more than 25% year to date.
It's all about driverless nowAccording to the two investors who heard the call, Musk described Tesla's existing electric vehicle, solar, and energy storage business lines as a backstop of value to Tesla's business in a new driverless era.
He said that even though Tesla drivers need to keep hands on the wheel today, that will become less necessary over time. Musk said that competitors such as GM's Cruise and Alphabet's Waymo can't catch up because Tesla has a fleet of connected cars on the road today, and a proprietary chip.
The hundreds of thousands of Teslas already on the road constantly slurp up data and send it back to Tesla's servers, which helps the company improve and advance its Autopilot and Full Self-Driving systems. Meanwhile, the company's self-driving computers, which it started working on about three years ago, are exclusive to Tesla and allegedly use less power in the vehicle than offerings from competitors like Nvidia.
Musk reiterated that because Teslas can be upgraded “over-the-air” with new software-enabled features and functionality, they will appreciate in value, unlike nearly every other car on the market. A Tesla will be worth $150,000 to $250,000 in 3 years, he claimed. He also said that a full self-driving upgrade will increase the value of any Tesla by a half order of magnitude, or five times.
Tesla expects to have 1 million vehicles on the road next year that are able to function as “robo-taxis,” Musk said, reiterating statements made at Autonomy Day and on the company's Q1 earnings call. Each car should be able to do 100 hours of work a week for its owner, making money as a robo-taxi he told investors.
Some investors and analysts have expressed skepticism about the robo-taxi plan and Tesla's self-driving strategy in general.
For instance, in a note to investors after Autonomy Day, Cowen analyst Jeffrey Osborne wrote: “We see a significant amount of technology and execution risk in the shift in strategy from competing in just electrification to Tesla also beating Nvidia in hardware, Google in software, and building a better ride-hailing service than current ride hailing leaders. ”
He added in the note, “The Tesla Network robotaxi plans seemed half baked, with the company appearing to either not have answers to or not even considered pretty basic question on the pricing, insurance liability, or regulatory and legal requirements.”
Zachary Kirkhorn, CFO, TeslaSource: TeslaOn Thursday's investor call, according to the people who heard it, Musk and other Tesla execs declined to give details when it came to more pragmatic issues like where the company's order book stands today, what they are doing to ameliorate problems with Tesla service and repairs, how much income Tesla expects to generate from regulatory credits for the rest of this year, and who will supply battery cells to Tesla in Asia as it begins manufacturing Model 3s in Shanghai.
One person asked what Tesla could do to improve its gross margins from the approximately 20% reported in the first quarter of 2019. The company previously promised it could achieve 25% margins.
Musk told investors Tesla would try to improve efficiency in its supply chain, but would feel good about 20% gross margins moving forward.
But he also tried to drive the conversation back to autonomy, calling it the fundamental driver of value for Tesla, and urged investors to stop nit-picking over vehicle margins.
WATCH: We went inside Tesla's first Gigafactory
VIDEO8:5008:50We went inside Tesla's first GigafactoryCNBC Reports
Electric car hopeful Nio closes California office amid layoffs
Nio ET Preview concept
Chinese electric-car startup Nio announced Thursday that it will close an office in California and lay off 70 workers, according to a report in The Verge.
The layoffs were filed with the California Employment Development Department.
After introducing two new SUVs alongside its high-performance electric sports car, Nio unveiled a new concept for its first sports sedan at the Shanghai auto show two weeks ago.
DON'T MISS: Nio unveils ET Preview electric sedan in Shanghai
The company closed its office in San Francisco where it employed 20 people and the company also laid off 50 workers at its U.S. headquarters in San Jose.
Nio began trading on the New York Stock Exchange in September, where its stock saw an initial spike, but has since dropped back to below its IPO level.
CHECK OUT: NIO aiming to innovate with battery cooling, patents suggest
In March, it revealed new patented battery cooling technology that cools the bus-bars in the battery and the junction box during fast charging.
Currently, Nio is the only company operating a network of electric-car battery swapping stations in China.
READ MORE: Electric carmaker Nio begins trading on NYSE, aims to sell cars in US
Nio had plans to build its own auto factory in China, but announced to investors in March that it had put those plans on hold in the face of “uncertainty” after the Chinese government cut subsidies on Chinese cars. For now, at least, it will continue to have its cars built at a contract-manufacturing facility owned by JAC Motors.
In a statement to The Verge, a Nio spokesperson said, “After four years of rapid growth, we’ve set up a global organization. However, fast development has also posed issues like repetitive functional departments, undefined work tasks, unclear work responsibilities, and insufficient work for certain people. We would like to solve them by optimizing management efficiency this year.”
Correction: An earlier version misidentified the number and location of the job cuts. Those figures have been corrected.
Triputra Group partners SF Express, Tokopedia to launch new delivery platform
May 7, 2019 Premium China’s SF Express, Indonesia’s Triputra Group and e-commerce unicorn Tokopedia have jointly set up a last-mile delivery platform, Anteraja.id, with an initial investment of $50 million. Go to Source
Volkswagen I.D. 3 Leaks Out, Then Disappears
The wait is coming to an end. This week customers will be able to pre-order the ID.3 The Volkswagen I.D. market launch in Europe, with the opening of pre-orders, is scheduled for May 8, which should be accompanied with some announcement on the car specs, prices and maybe some new images. It seems that the… Continue reading Volkswagen I.D. 3 Leaks Out, Then Disappears