SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Tesla Inc’s sudden decision to shutter the bulk of its stores around the world raises a red flag over the future of its solar branch, a declining business it paid $2.6 billion for in a controversial 2016 deal. FILE PHOTO: A SolarCity vehicle is shown in San Diego, California, U.S., November… Continue reading RPT-Tesla’s store-shuttering strategy may pull the rug out of solar
Tag: Electric vehicles
Here’s how many people Tesla laid off at its California facilities – CNBC
Tesla‘s January layoffs impacted at least 1,017 California employees, according to the company’s filings with the state’s Employment Development Department that were obtained by CNBC. Bloomberg first reported on the number of California employees effected.
Tesla pays off $920 million convertible bond in cash
Kiichiro Sato | AP
Tesla CEO and founder of the Boring Company Elon Musk.
Tesla has paid off its $920 million convertible bond obligation in cash, sources familiar with the matter told CNBC. The company also confirmed that it made the payment today.
The $920 million in convertible senior notes expired March 1, at a conversion price of $359.87 per share. Since Tesla's stock hasn't traded at or above $359 in weeks, the electric vehicle maker had to pay in all-cash rather than half-stock and half-cash as it had previously intended.
In its 2018 annual report, Tesla said it had $3.69 billion in unrestricted cash and equivalents to end the year.
When asked about the payment earlier this week, a Tesla spokesperson pointed to comments from the fourth-quarter shareholder letter, when the company said it has “sufficient cash on hand to comfortably settle in cash our convertible bond that will mature in March 2019.” Tesla also said that its cash position improved by $1.45 billion in the second half of 2018, and that it expects positive net income and positive free cash flow “in every quarter beyond Q1 2019.”
WATCH: Tesla shifts to online sales, lowers price of Model 3
Tesla shifts to online sales, lowers price of Model 3
10 Hours Ago | 06:24
Electric trikes are the latest battery-powered gadgets to enter the ride-sharing world
Had your fill of all those dockless electric bikes and scooters littering the streets of cities across America? Hankering for something new, something different, maybe even something that looks sillier than a scooter? Gotcha, the bike- and scooter-share service, has got you to covered. (Pun intended.) Gotcha, which operates bike and scooter-sharing services on dozens… Continue reading Electric trikes are the latest battery-powered gadgets to enter the ride-sharing world
NIO aiming to innovate with battery cooling, patents suggest
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$35,000 Tesla Model 3, “Full Self-Driving” returns, BMW-Mercedes car sharing: Today’s Car News
Smart Forease+ concept
Tesla announced it will sell the base $35,000 Model 3 this month, and will only sell cars online going forward. At the same time, CEO Elon Musk announced plans for the company's long-awaited Full Self-Driving system. The U.S. Senate confirmed Andrew Wheeler as permanent EPA Administrator. Daimler teamed up with BMW to develop car- and ride-sharing programs, as well as full-self-driving systems. And we take a closer look at the battery cooling system that NIO plans to use on its upcoming Tesla fighter. All this and more on Green Car Reports.
After a year of delay, Tesla CEO Elon Musk announced Thursday that the company will begin building the long-awaited base version of the Tesla Model 3, perhaps finally selling the car that hundreds of thousands gave Tesla a deposit to buy two years ago. At the same time, Musk announced that the company will close many of its stores and begin selling entirely online and revealed details of Tesla's upcoming Full Self-Driving system.
The Senate confirmed Acting EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler, who has rolled back emissions regulations, to permanently head the agency.
Mercedes-Benz's parent company Daimler teamed with rival BMW to develop ride- and car-sharing programs around the world, as well as a full self-driving system.
We get a first look at the battery cooling system that Chinese luxury electric carmaker NIO will use in its upcoming luxury electric cars.
Daimler's existing electric city-car brand, Smart, has developed a new concept for next week's Geneva auto show with a removable, hard-shelled fabric roof.
Finally, in sunny Sacramento, California, Uber's Jump bikes are proving more popular than its cars.
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Nissan: Maker of the world’s best-selling electric vehicle announces pricing for the new longer-range Nissan LEAF PLUS
LEAF S PLUS starting price is $36,5501 with up to 226 miles of range The Nissan LEAF, with the 40kWh battery and up to 150 miles of range3, is available at a starting price of under $30,000 Nissan continues to offer 8-year/100,000 mile warranty on lithium-ion battery pack which also includes battery capacity loss protection… Continue reading Nissan: Maker of the world’s best-selling electric vehicle announces pricing for the new longer-range Nissan LEAF PLUS
HUBJECT AND MODULO WORK TOGETHER TO SPUR EMOBILITY IN FRANCE AND BEYOND
Tours, February 26 – Last week Hubject and Modulo signed a eRoaming contract in France. Modulo is a Société Publique Locale created to gather Syndicats d’Énergie in France and enable them to offer simple, seamless and open charging solutions for EV drivers. The eRoaming agreement with Modulo enables all Syndicats d’Énergie charging stations, to be… Continue reading HUBJECT AND MODULO WORK TOGETHER TO SPUR EMOBILITY IN FRANCE AND BEYOND
A month ago, Elon Musk thought Tesla would be profitable. Now he doesn’t. What changed?
Noah Berger | Reuters
Tesla Chief Executive Office Elon Musk speaks at his company's factory in Fremont, California.
How rapidly things change in Silicon Valley.
A month ago, Tesla CEO Elon Musk seemed confident the electric car maker would turn a profit in the first quarter. Now he's predicting a loss. The reversal — disclosed on a media call Thursday night — overshadowed what was supposed to be good news during a tough week of headlines: Tesla was finally unveiling its long-awaited Model 3 sedan at $35,000.
The shares, already under pressure from Musk's ongoing tussle with federal securities regulators, tanked by almost 8 percent in midday trading Friday.
To make its popular electric car at a more affordable price for consumers, Musk said the company has to trim stores, cut employees and shift sales online. It's all part of a push to profitably sell the long-anticipated (and much delayed) $35,000 variant of the Model 3, the midsize sedan Musk and company had long bet would take Tesla from a niche manufacturer to a major automaker.
On Jan. 30, Musk told investors he thought Tesla would continue making money after finally turning its first back-to-back profits during the third and fourth quarters of last year, fulfilling his previous forecast that Tesla would become “sustainably profitable” from the third quarter of 2018 onward.
“I would say at this point I'm optimistic about being profitable in Q1,” Musk said on the Jan. 30 conference call discussing the company's fourth-quarter earnings. “Not by a lot, but I'm optimistic about being profitable in Q1 and for all quarters going forward.”
So what happened?
Musk cited one-time charges this quarter as one major factor, though he did not specify what those are. The company has $920 million in debt due Friday, and Musk has previously said it had enough cash on hand to cover.
He also said there have been some difficulties getting cars to China and Europe.
How much money Tesla can make selling a cheaper Model 3, and whether customers will actually buy it, are major concerns among investors.
“Tesla cut the size of their battery by 30 percent to get this $35,000 base unit out the door,” said Craig Irwin, an analyst with Roth Capital Partners. That is probably a reduction in cost of about $5,500 per car, Irwin said. But who wants a low-range car, he said.
“They killed the 60 kWh Model S for poor demand, and even weaker margins,” he said. “It seems to dovetail nicely that 2019 will see major margin pressure,” he said.
The fact that the company is moving all vehicle sales online and cutting retail jobs also suggests it is coming to the realization that many industry observers suspected all along — profitably selling a $35,000 electric car will be very difficult.
“Tesla appears to have answered the question we have long asked around whether the company was going to be able to profitably produce the $35k Model 3 through production efficiencies and increased volumes,” Cowen analyst Jeff Osborne said in a note to clients Friday. “Switching the strategy now to shed stores that are the face of the brand beyond Elon Musk's Twitter feed, likely means that management has come to the realization that it was not going to be feasible.”
It is also significant that this is all happening as federal tax credits for Tesla cars start to wind down, said CFRA analyst Garrett Nelson. The first 200,000 customers to buy Tesla cars received a federal tax credit of $7,500. But those were halved at the beginning of the year, after Tesla hit the limit. They will continue to be phased out by the quarter.
“I think it all goes back to the EV tax credits, which are negatively impacting sales and gross margins,” Nelson said.
Red flags went up for Nelson just a few days after the New Year when Tesla said it would cut prices on its vehicles. Then the company announced it would focus on producing higher-cost exports to China and Europe, lay off workers and introduce a Model 3 leasing program, he said.
“The earnings warning just confirms these red flags, and while it's a bit early to say, it appears that the company's profitability challenges could potentially linger well beyond Q1,” he said.
The announcement certainly was abrupt and did not appear to be made from a position of strength, said Bernstein analyst Toni Sacconaghi in a note Friday. But over the long term there are still several levers Tesla can pull to improve profits, including reducing sales and manufacturing costs as well as driving higher sales volume with the cheaper Model 3, its leasing programs and international expansion, he said.
“In some ways, we believe CEO Musk's recent focus on profitability each quarter may have been misplaced – and that Tesla might be best served by looking to press its brand and first mover advantage by aggressively making and distributing its cars – which yesterday's move appears to be doing,” he said.
In brief: Ola’s EV unit secures $56m funding from Matrix, Tiger Global
The ride-hailing giant is targeting to put a million electric vehicles on India’s streets by 2022. Go to Source