Tesla posts surprise $2.17 billion third-quarter profit, up 17.3% from a
year ago
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[October 24, 2024] By
TOM KRISHER
DETROIT (AP) — Tesla’s third-quarter net income rose 17.3% compared with
a year ago on stronger electric vehicle sales, and an optimistic CEO
Elon Musk predicted 20% to 30% sales growth next year.
The strong performance changed the trajectory of the year for the
Austin, Texas-based company, which had seen sales and profits decline in
the first two quarters.
In its letter to investors, Tesla predicted slight growth in vehicle
deliveries this year, better than the 1.8 million delivered worldwide in
2023.
Tesla said Wednesday that it made $2.17 billion from July through
September, more than the $1.85 billion profit it posted in the same
period of 2023.
The earnings came despite price cuts and low-interest financing that
helped boost sales of the company’s aging vehicle lineup during the
quarter. It was Tesla’s first year-over-year quarterly profit increase
of 2024, a year plagued by falling sales and prices.
Revenue in the quarter rose 7.8% to $25.18 billion, falling short of
Wall Street analysts who estimated it at $25.47 billion, according to
FactSet. Tesla made an adjusted 72 cents per share, soundly beating
analyst expectations of 59 cents.
Shares in Tesla Inc. soared nearly 12% in trading after Wednesday’s
closing bell.
On a conference call with analysts, Musk said the profit increase came
despite a challenging environment for auto sales with still-high loan
interest rates. “I think if you look at EV companies worldwide, to the
best of my knowledge, no EV company is even profitable,” he said.
Musk qualified his prediction that Tesla would post 2025 vehicle sales
growth of 20% to 30% by saying it could be changed by “negative external
events.”
Earlier this month Tesla said it sold 462,890 vehicles from July through
September, up 6.4% from a year ago. The sales numbers were better than
analysts had expected.
The letter said that Tesla is on track to start production of new
vehicles, including more affordable models, in the first half of next
year, something investors had been looking for. The new vehicles will
use parts from its current models and will be made on the same assembly
lines as Tesla’s current model lineup, the letter said.
The new vehicles were not identified and the price was nebulous. Musk
has said in the past the company is working on a car that will cost
about $25,000, but said Wednesday that a new affordable vehicle would
cost under $30,000 including government tax incentives.
Earlier this month, the company showed off a purpose-built two-seat
robotaxi called “Cybercab” at a glitzy event at a Hollywood movie
studio. Musk said it would be in production before 2027 and cost around
$25,000.
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A Tesla Cybertruck passes as the sun sets behind SpaceX's mega
rocket Starship, on Oct. 12, 2024, in Boca Chica, Texas. (AP
Photo/Eric Gay, File)
By using parts from existing models
and the current manufacturing system, Tesla won’t reach cost
reductions that it previously expected using a new manufacturing
setup.
Tesla said it reduced the cost of goods per vehicle to its lowest
level yet, about $35,100.
The company’s widely watched gross profit margin, the percentage of
revenue it gets to keep after expenses, rose to 19.8%, the highest
in a year, but still smaller than the peak of 29.1% in the first
quarter of 2022.
During the quarter, Tesla’s revenue from regulatory credits
purchased by other automakers who can’t meet government emissions
targets hit $739 million, the second highest quarter in company
history.
Musk said Tesla's “Full Self-Driving” system is improving and would
drive more safely than humans in the second quarter of next year.
Despite the name, Teslas using “Full Self-Driving” cannot drive
themselves, and human drivers must be ready to intervene at all
times.
The company, he said, is offering an autonomous ride-hailing service
to employees in the San Francisco Bay Area, but it currently has
human safety drivers. It expects to start a robotaxi service for the
public in California and Texas next year, he said.
Musk also conceded that it may not be possible to reach autonomous
driving safety levels with older editions of “Full Self-Driving”
hardware. If it can't do that, Tesla will upgrade computers in the
older cars for free, he said.
The self-driving claims come just five days after U.S. safety
regulators opened an investigation into the system's cameras to see
in low-visibility conditions such as sun glare, fog and airborne
dust. The probe raised doubts about whether the system will be ready
to drive on its own next year.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said in documents
posted Friday that it opened the probe of 2.4 million Teslas after
the company reported four crashes in low visibility conditions. In
one, a woman who stopped to help after a crash on an Arizona freeway
was struck and killed by a Tesla.
Investigators will look into the ability of “Full Self-Driving” to
“detect and respond appropriately to reduced roadway visibility
conditions."
Edward Jones analyst Jeff Windau said the earnings report and
conference call showed that Tesla is making money on software, a
business with high profit margins.
Still, he has a “hold” rating on the stock as the company moves
toward robotics and autonomous vehicles. “They’ve got a lot of
challenging goals out there,” he said.
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