Tesla shares edge higher ahead of quarterly results
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[April 23, 2024] (Reuters)
- Shares of Tesla edged higher on Tuesday ahead of the electric car
maker's first-quarter results, with analysts expecting its lowest gross
profit margin in more than six years.
The stock was up 0.7% at $143 in premarket trading ahead of the report,
due after the close of trading.
CEO Elon Musk will likely face pointed questions from investors during
the post-results conference call about the fate of the so-called Model
2, a low-cost vehicle he had promised in January would be available in
2025.
Reuters exclusively reported earlier this month that Tesla had scrapped
plans for the model and shifted focus to building a self-driving
robotaxi on the same small-car platform.
Musk initially posted on social media that "Reuters is lying," but has
yet to identify any inaccuracies or clarify the fate of the model.
Investors had pinned hopes for sales growth on the Model 2.
The billionaire had also been expected to meet India's Prime Minister
Narendra Modi on Monday and announce major investments in an auto
factory which was expected to produce a small, affordable model. Musk
postponed at the last minute, citing "very heavy Tesla obligations."
Tesla's sales growth is slowing, which is expected to weigh heavily on
Tuesday's results.
The automaker earlier this month reported an 8.5% decline in deliveries
and rising inventories. Over the weekend, it announced the latest in a
series of price cuts globally on the Model 3, Model Y and other models,
further eating into margins.
Several analysts expect Tesla's annual deliveries to fall for the first
time in 2024 after years of double-digit growth. The company warned in
January that delivery growth would be "notably lower" this year,
signaling that price cuts would be insufficient to lift demand.
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The company logo is pictured on a Tesla Model X electric car in
Berlin, Germany, November 13, 2019. REUTERS/Fabrizio Bensch/File
Photo
Tesla shares have lost about 43% so far this year, and is among the
worst performers on the S&P 500 index.
Wall Street expects Tesla's automotive gross margin excluding
regulatory credits to be 15.2%, according to 20 analysts polled by
Visible Alpha, down from 19% a year earlier and the lowest since the
fourth quarter of 2017.
Analysts on average see March-quarter revenue down 5.05% to $22.15
billion, according to LSEG data.
Musk has predicted the imminent arrival of fully autonomous cars for
years, but may still be years from delivering, given the steep
engineering and regulatory challenges.
He has also raised more questions with recent social media posts
about Tesla's self-driving vehicle strategy. Musk recently teased a
"Robotaxi unveil" on "8/8," presumably meaning August 2024, and
later posted that going "balls to the wall" on autonomy was a
"blindingly obvious" move.
(Reporting by Noel Randewich in Oakland, California; additional
reporting by Aditya Soni; Editing by Varun H K)
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