Tesla shares plunged after Elon Musk’s pitch for investors to look past slower sales growth fell flat.
The stock fell as much as 10 per cent on Thursday morning after Tesla narrowly missed earnings estimates and warned its rate of expansion will be “notably lower” this year. The company spent all of 2023 cutting prices to boost sales, which ate into profits.
The effectiveness of that strategy is waning, and executives cautioned they’re approaching the limits of efforts to cut costs on the current vehicle line-up.
“Tesla is signalling that the days of 50 per cent or even 30 per cent to 40 per cent growth year-over-year is not going to happen in 2024,” Seth Goldstein, a Morningstar Research analyst, said in an interview. “At a certain point, you can’t cut prices any more.”
In a departure from past practice, Tesla avoided offering specific targets for the year ahead. The company fell well short of the 50 per cent annual growth that management guided to in the past despite slashing prices throughout 2023. Vehicle deliveries rose 38 per cent, and analysts are predicting a 20 per cent increase this year.
“While 2024 will be a challenging year, it is becoming increasingly apparent that 2025 will likely not be better, with continued pressure on growth and margins,” Toni Sacconaghi, a Bernstein analyst with the equivalent of a sell rating on the stock, wrote in a research note.
Tesla shares are having their worst start ever to a year. Thursday’s slump was the steepest intraday drop in three months, and the stock is now trading at its lowest level since last May.
The carmaker reported earnings of 71 US cents (65 cents) a share for the fourth quarter, missing the 73-cents-a-share average estimate. The company generated $25.2 billion (€23.2 billion) in revenue, less than the $25.9 billion (€23.8 billion) predicted by Wall Street.
Mr Musk suggested this will all be temporary. Tesla is going to build its cheaper, next-generation vehicle as soon as the second half of next year at its factory in Austin, and then in Mexico. The company will also make the model at another site in North America. That could help the company appeal to more mass-market buyers who can’t afford the company’s existing EVs, which start at about $39,000 (€36,000) in the US.
“That will be a challenging production ramp,” Mr Musk said of the next-generation vehicle. “Once it’s going, it will be head and shoulders above any other manufacturing technology that exists anywhere in the world. It’s next-level.”
Until then, Tesla will try to reach new consumers with its existing line-up. Its newest vehicle, the Cybertruck, is rolling out gradually after launching in November. The company said that the ramp-up of the stainless steel-clad pickup will be slower than other cars and hasn’t given an annual sales forecast.
New products are of particular importance for Tesla because it has a fairly limited vehicle line-up. While sales of the Model Y sport utility vehicle and Model 3 sedan have soared, they still have relatively high sticker prices compared to China’s BYD, the new EV leader. As high interest rates and inflation hit consumers’ wallets last year, Tesla marked down its vehicles in dramatic fashion.
That put a dampener on profitability. Tesla’s automotive gross margin, excluding revenue from regulatory credits, came in at 17.2 per cent for the quarter, a slight improvement from the lowest in over four years. Tesla has blamed the lower profitability on price cuts, higher spending on research and development and other expenses, including ramping up the Cybertruck.
Tesla faces stiff competition in the form of Chinese EV makers, which Mr Musk said are “the most competitive car companies in the world.” Chinese brands probably will succeed exporting, he said, unless tariffs or other trade barriers are implemented to halt their advance. The CEO has witnessed the threat firsthand, with BYD overtaking Tesla as the world’s top seller of EVs in the quarter.
“Frankly, I think if there are not trade barriers established, they will pretty much demolish most other car companies in the world,” Mr Musk said of China’s automakers.
Musk also elaborated on his plea for a 25 per cent stake in Tesla to solidify his influence. The EV maker’s board is unlikely to propose a new compensation plan for the CEO until a Delaware judge rules on a shareholder lawsuit regarding Mr Musk’s massive stock award approved in 2018. – Bloomberg