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Musk’s Big Tesla Growth Target Is a Problem

Bloomberg2023-01-26

The company’s forecast for vehicle production falls short of estimates and its focus on compound annual growth obscures 2023’s sharp slowdown.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk has been testifying in a lawsuit over 2018 tweets saying he was taking Tesla private with funding secured. Photographer: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images North America

It pays to parse the language of any company’s earnings report, but perhaps more so for Tesla Inc. You could say it’s in the corporate genes. After all, Chief Executive Elon Musk has spent much of the past several days trying to convince a jury that he really did have “funding secured” in 2018. That’s despite his mooted multi-billion dollar take-private deal seeming to have had less in the way of documented pre-approvals than your average household mortgage application.

The line that caught my eye on Wednesday evening concerned guidance, with Tesla aiming to produce 1.8 million vehicles this year and, thereby, “remain ahead of the long-term 50% CAGR,” or compound annual growth rate. For a couple of years, Tesla has said it aims to grow annual production by half, on average, over a “multi-year horizon.” Compare that 2023 target with 2020’s output of just over half-a-million and you do indeed get a compounded growth rate of more than 50%. But actual growththisyear looks set to be 31%.

Let’s acknowledge that is still phenomenal for any reasonably sized autos manufacturer. Just five years ago, Tesla produced only about 250,000 vehicles.

But the tell here is the language, with Tesla going out of its way to emphasize that, technically, it will remain true to the “multi-year” target despite growth slowing sharply. Certainly, it has slowed more sharply than expected: The consensus forecast for 2023 is 1.95 million. Which gets at why Tesla likely felt the need for a growth-secured moment.

The disappointing fourth-quarter deliveries and price cuts that have unnerved investors over the past month or so fed through to Wednesday’s results. Inventory jumped and implied average selling prices, excluding leased vehicles and regulatory credits, dipped under $52,000, their lowest in a year. Even that figure was boosted by roughly $800 via the recognition of $324 million of deferred revenue linked to Tesla’s generously named Full Self Driving package. Gross profit per vehicle sold, at about $12,300, was the lowest in almost two years. Free cash flow dropped by a third, year-over-year, well shy of forecasts.

This is not surprising, but it is troubling. It isn’t surprising because companies chasing growth quite often run into the problem of boosting capacity faster than sales. Tesla produced 1.37 million vehicles last year but lists capacity of more than 1.9 million, with new and expanded factories expected in markets from Mexico to Indonesia.

It is troubling because, despite the collapse in Tesla’s stock over the past year or so, it still trades at a 77% premium to the S&P 500 based on multiples of forward earnings estimates — estimates that look vulnerable after these results. Tesla remains priced for growth, but the growth story comes with the caveats of using average multi-year percentages and evident reliance on price cuts. The latter are especially inimical to Tesla’s aura because price cuts to move product are what you get from regular old car companies that trade on single-digit earnings multiples (Tesla’s is 32 times).

Even worse, regular old car companies haven’t been cutting prices of late, despite lower deliveries. This owes partly to the pandemic-related disruption of supply chains, leaving dealer lots sparse and giving the industry a relatively rare dose of pricing power. The likes of Ford Motor Co. took this on board in terms of aligning production more closely with sales. That is, in effect, the opposite of what’s happened with Tesla as it chases growth.

During Wednesday evening’s Q&A, Musk touted Tesla’s AI capabilities. Framing Tesla as being more than an autos company has long been an effective way of boosting its valuation — albeit less effective of late. This year’s challenge for Tesla won’t be delivering robotaxis or a walking robot. It will be dealing with soft demand amid a potential recession that Musk seems to regard as all but certain. For investors who have just undergone a year of deflating expectations, it will be bracing for another dose.

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Comment12

  • DavidHTW
    ·2023-01-26
    Wow
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  • Chrissimo
    ·2023-01-26
    As for the reduction in Tesla price, I don't understand why these experts here are worried about, it is infact a good strategy to ensure Tesla has the biggest pie in EV market in the next 3-5 years... basically selling it for less but they sell more in volume!!! If they are going to the market at this price point, it will slow down their competitors' expansion, other start-up EV makers should be worried about this!!! Come on for the same price, I wouldn't pay more for Polestar, ID4, Hyudai, Kia, etc.... the engineering of Tesla vehicle is in another level...by the way, Teska manufacturing techniques give Tesla mire profit margins oer vehicle.. so don't forget that. 
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    • WooSM
      Wow
      2023-01-26
      Reply
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    • serenityj
      ok
      2023-01-26
      Reply
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    • PROMCODE
      l
      2023-01-26
      Reply
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    View more 2 comments
  • 淋淼淼
    ·2023-01-26
    Ok
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  • AlanTLK
    ·2023-01-26
    Sick of Bloomberg's FUD. Always seeking to diss Tesla. Hidden agenda. Tesla doesn't pay Bloomberg advertising dollars. Annoying as hell.
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  • YYMA
    ·2023-01-26
    yes
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  • Johny Lange
    ·2023-01-26
    This is really an old news... Tesla have plans opening new plants and have the Whitehouse confirmed. With 3000 jobs opening to support back the economy preventing recession, job rates and individual spending power get worse. Your analysis speaks half of what had Tesla been through. Better analysis what it's coming up with. Probably another grow and spiltnin Q3 2024...
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    • Cam20
      [Cool]
      2023-01-26
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    • hmmwvms
      Excellent
      2023-01-26
      Reply
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    • Rainy M
      [Surprised]
      2023-01-26
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  • Venture118f
    ·2023-01-26
    Nothing u said good about a productive n efficient coy... I guess u had missed d run up ... 🤭🤭🤭Anyway I'm still buying whenever is dirt cheap !! 
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  • The Knight
    ·2023-01-26
    When the January Sales numbers show up, our       Jaws will drop. I am sure that the sales volume will escalate to record highs. The main objectives is to drive up sales volume with economies of scale on  the supply chain costs which is a competitive        Advantage. With the barrier of entry being raised,  small EV starts-up will be driven out of market.     Tesla needs to focus in building more factories      than Ever before. I am sure that it is the leader in   EV industry. 
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    • Edwinchua75
      2023-01-26
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    • Moneyong
      Ok
      2023-01-26
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    • wywy
      [Miser]
      2023-01-26
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  • LeonTse
    ·2023-01-26
    It's not surprising the delivery fell short with the interest hike shooting up. Fact is, every car maker have the same problem, it's not Tesla alone. People will prefers the interest rate to drop before taking a loan to buy a new car. Seems there are still have quite a lot of short position on Tesla 🤔.
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    • 甄珍珍
      🤓
      2023-01-26
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    • CSNeo
      [开心]
      2023-01-26
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    • vinny
      [Cool]
      2023-01-26
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  • breAkdaWn
    ·2023-01-26
    EM is King!
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  • JunioR
    ·2023-01-26
    He is probably just keeping up appearances and hyping forecasts so that sheep will follow and keep the stock price high enough while he continues selling shares even though he promised he will not be selling anymore shares. Why do people still listen to him and trust him? 
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  • nctony
    ·2023-01-26
    His the man[Applaud] 
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    • nctony
      tks
      2023-02-16
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    • nctony
      tks
      2023-01-27
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    • nctony
      tks
      2023-01-26
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