U.S. opens probe into fatal Tesla crash,
fire in California
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[March 28, 2018]
By David Shepardson
(Reuters) - A fatal crash and vehicle fire
of a Tesla Inc Model X near Mountain View, California, last week has
prompted a federal field investigation, the U.S. National Transportation
Safety Board said on Tuesday, sparking a big selloff in Tesla stock.
Tesla tumbled 8.2 percent, or $25 a share, to close at $279.18, the
lowest close in almost a year, after news of the investigation.
Late on Tuesday, Moody's Investors Service downgraded Tesla's credit
rating to B3 from B2. Moody's said the ratings "reflect the significant
shortfall in the production rate of the company's Model 3 electric
vehicle." It also "faces liquidity pressures due to its large negative
free cash flow and the pending maturities of convertible bonds."
Tesla shares fell another 2.6 percent in after-hours trading.
Tesla has $230 million in convertible bonds maturing in November 2018
and $920 million in March 2019.
Moody's said its negative outlook for Tesla "reflects the likelihood
that Tesla will have to undertake a large, near-term capital raise in
order to refund maturing obligations and avoid a liquidity shortfall."
Moody’s said Tesla is targeting weekly production of 2,500 Model 3
vehicles by the end of March, and 5,000 per week by the end of June,
down from the company’s year-earlier production expectations of 5,000
per week by the end of 2017 and 10,000 by the end of 2018. Tesla plans
to provide an update on Model 3 production next week.
Shares of chipmaker Nvidia Corp, which supplies Uber Technologies Inc
[UBER.UL], Tesla, Volkswagen AG <VOWG_p.DE> and other automakers, closed
down 7.8 percent after it disclosed it suspended self-driving tests
across the globe.
QUESTIONS ABOUT ACCIDENT
In last week's accident, it was unclear if Tesla's automated control
system was driving the car. The accident involved two other cars, the
NTSB and police said. Tesla vehicles have a system called Autopilot that
handles some driving tasks. The 38-year-old Tesla driver died at a
nearby hospital shortly after the crash.
Late Tuesday, Tesla said in a blog post it does "not yet know what
happened in the moments leading up to the crash," but added data shows
that Tesla owners have driven the same stretch of highway with Autopilot
engaged "roughly 85,000 times... and there has never been an accident
that we know of."
The company said it is working with authorities to recover the logs from
the computer inside the vehicle to try to gain a better understanding of
what happened. The company statement did not address if the crashed
vehicle was in Autopilot mode.
"We have been deeply saddened by this accident, and we have offered our
full cooperation to the authorities as we work to establish the facts of
the incident," Tesla said in a statement earlier.
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A vehicle's chassis frame and a Tesla Model S 100D car stand in a
showroom of U.S. car manufacturer Tesla in Zurich, Switzerland March
28, 2018. REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann
Government scrutiny of the Palo Alto, California company is
mounting. This is the second NTSB field investigation into a Tesla
crash since January.
The California Highway Patrol said the electric-powered Tesla Model
X crashed into a freeway divider on Friday and then was hit by a
Mazda before colliding with an Audi.
The Tesla's lithium batteries caught fire, and emergency officials
consulted company engineers before determining how to extinguish the
battery fire and move the vehicle safely. NTSB said the issues being
examined include the post-crash fire and removing the vehicle from
the scene.
The Tesla blog post said Tesla battery packs are designed to ensure
that a battery spreads slowly in the rare circumstance it catches
fire.
In January, the NTSB and U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration sent investigators to California to investigate the
crash of a fire truck and a Tesla that apparently was traveling in
semi-autonomous mode. The agencies have not disclosed any findings.
The NTSB can make safety recommendations but only NHTSA can order
automakers to recall unsafe vehicles or fine automakers if they fail
to remedy safety defects in a timely fashion. Before the agency can
demand a recall, it must open a formal investigation, a step it has
not yet taken.
Tesla's Autopilot allows drivers under certain conditions to take
their hands off the wheel for extended periods. Still, Tesla
requires users to agree to keep their hands on the wheel "at all
times" before they can use Autopilot.
The NTSB faulted Tesla in a prior fatal Autopilot crash.
In September, NTSB Chairman Robert Sumwalt said operational
limitations in the Tesla Model S played a major role in a May 2016
crash in Florida that killed a driver using Autopilot. That crash
raised questions about the safety of systems that can perform
driving tasks for long stretches but cannot completely replace human
drivers.
Tesla in September 2016 unveiled improvements to Autopilot, adding
new limits on hands-off driving.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; editing by Lisa Shumaker, David
Gregorio and Cynthia Osterman)
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