Instant View: Elon Musk's 'super bad feeling' about the economy
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[June 03, 2022] FRANKFURT
(Reuters) - Tesla Chief Executive Elon Musk told top managers he had a
"super bad feeling" about the economy and that the electric carmaker
needed to cut staff by about 10%, according to an internal email seen by
Reuters.
The email, titled "pause all hiring worldwide", was sent to Tesla
executives on Thursday, underscoring an increasingly gloomy global
economic outlook with prices soaring and war in Ukraine passing its
100th day.
The message from Musk came shortly after Jamie Dimon, chairman and chief
executive of JPMorgan Chase, said the U.S. economy faced challenges akin
to a "hurricane".
Here is reaction to the comments:
FRANK SCHWOPE, AUTOMOTIVE ANALYST WITH NORDLB:
"I see the statements as a forewarning ... in case the economy takes a
turn for the worse."
"All car manufacturers are facing many problems at the moment: supply
chain issues due to (coronavirus) and the Ukraine war, closures in
China, supply shortages and so on."
"Since many plants have not been working at full capacity since the (coronavirus)
pandemic began, planned cost-cutting measures by the car companies are
quite understandable."
FIONA CINCOTTA, SENIOR FINANCIAL MARKETS ANALYST, CITY INDEX, LONDON
"Although the Fed thinks a soft landing is possible ... there are some
warning signs in the economy. We know that growth is slowing and
inflation remains persistently high and we know that the Fed will need
to act aggressively to bring inflation back down."
"The question is - will they be able to act as aggressively as they need
to, and obviously Elon Musk doesn't think that they're going to be able
to, without putting the economy into a deep recession. China slowdown is
an added problem."
LORENZO CODOGNO, HEAD OF LC MACRO ADVISERS AND FORMER CHIEF ECONOMIST AT
THE ITALIAN TREASURY:
"It is clear that rising prices will weaken consumption. That is
something we'll need to face."
"If the inflation flare-up ... starts fading at the beginning of next
year ... we will probably not see as dramatic an impact on the global
economy as Musk seems to indicate."
"And if the shock is temporary, companies will probably have an interest
in ... not losing human capital."
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Model Y cars are pictured during the opening ceremony of the new
Tesla Gigafactory for electric cars in Gruenheide, Germany, March
22, 2022. Patrick Pleul/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
DANIEL IVES, MANAGING DIRECTOR AND SENIOR TECH ANALYST, WEDBUSH SECURITIES
"Street will clearly read this message negatively at first blush," Ives wrote on
Twitter.
"Elephant in the room now remains the radio silence on Twitter deal. Musk more
negative on economy, what’s next in Twitter saga."
CARSTEN BRZESKI, GLOBAL HEAD OF MACROECONOMIC RESEARCH, ING
"Musk's bad feeling is shared by many people."
"We're talking about stagnation and a global economy which has to go through
significant structural change, such as decarbonisation, deglobalisation and
adjusting to older societies."
"But we are not talking about global recession. We expect a cooling of the
global economy towards the end of the year. The U.S. will cool off, while China
and Europe are not going to rebound."
"Laying off workers, however, is not the best reaction. We will need skilled
workers more than ever in the future. This could turn into firing and then
hiring," he said.
FRANCOIS SAVARY, CHIEF INVESTMENT OFFICER, PRIME PARTNERS
"At the end of the day it's easy to make such comments. Everyone has fears but
there is no sign yet to justify such a negative outlook."
"There is a risk of recession yes ... but ... you need to see numbers heading in
that direction and so far there are none."
"It will depend a lot on what happens in the labour market. If we have a
significant deterioration of U.S. labour markets over the summer, then ... there
is a risk of recession next year."
(Reporting by John O'Donnell in Frankfurt, Sujata Rao in London, Chavi Mehta and
Medha Singh in Bangalore and Elvira Pollina in Milan; Editing by Mark Potter and
Carmel Crimmins)
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