Stock Market Cafe
  • Home
  • Trading News
  • Email Whitelisting
  • Privacy Policy
  • Home
  • Trading News
  • Email Whitelisting
  • Privacy Policy
No Result
View All Result
Stock Market Cafe
No Result
View All Result
Home Trading News

Elon Musk urges Tesla employees to reduce cost of vehicle deliveries

by
November 28, 2021
in Trading News
0
0
SHARES
1
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

RELATED POSTS

The second-half is ‘not looking good’: Strategists on how to weather the market storm

Tesla Pauses Plants After Ending Shaky Quarter With a Production Milestone

Tesla’s Model Y compact crossover vehicles at a showroom in Shanghai, China, on January 18, 2021.

VCG | Visual China Group | Getty Images

Amid ongoing port constraints and rising shipping costs, Tesla CEO Elon Musk urged employees Friday, in a company-wide email obtained by CNBC, to look for ways to reduce the cost of delivering electric vehicles to customers, rather than rushing orders out last-minute to hit its end of quarter sales goals.

This year, Tesla has struggled to deliver new cars to customers in the U.S. in line with originally promised date ranges. As CNBC previously reported, some Tesla customers here experienced delivery delays of months, leaving them paying out of pocket for rentals and ride-hailing apps, and needing to re-apply for loans due to slipped deadlines.

Tesla is not alone in leaving customers waiting longer than they had hoped for their new, fully electric cars. Last week, for example, newly public competitor Rivian Automotive notified people who had reserved their R1S, a sport utility vehicle, of delivery delays.

Still, sales have grown this year for Tesla seemingly unbowed by unpredictable delivery dates.

Vehicle deliveries, which are the closest approximation to sales reported by Elon Musk’s electric vehicle and renewable energy business, amounted to about 500,000 total in 2020. During the first three quarters of 2021, Tesla had already reported deliveries of 627,350 vehicles.

Since the start of 2021, the company has not provided a clear target for 2021 vehicle deliveries. But Tesla has reiterated its loose guidance for “50% average annual growth in vehicle deliveries” over a multiyear horizon, including on its third-quarter earnings call.

JL Warren Capital’s CEO and Head of Research, Junheng Li, wrote in a note to investors last week that she expects Tesla sales to continue to rise, at least in China this quarter. “Soaring gas price benefits all new energy vehicle brands,” in the country she noted.

Some 1.3 million electric vehicles were sold in China in 2020, according to Canalys research. The firm predicted that the number would grow to 1.9 million EV sales in China by the end of this year.

China remains the world’s largest market for new cars, with strong government support for going electric.

Here’s the full e-mail that Elon Musk sent out on Friday to all Tesla employees (transcribed by CNBC).

From: Elon Musk

To: Everybody

Subj. Q4 deliveries vs. cost efficiency

Date: Nov. 26, 2021 [time stamp redacted]

Per my email several weeks ago, our focus this quarter should be on minimizing cost of deliveries rather than spending heavily on expedite fees, overtime and temporary contractors just so that cars arrive in Q4.

What has happened historically is that we sprint like crazy at end of quarter to maximize deliveries, but then deliveries drop massively in the first few weeks of the next quarter. In effect, looked at over a six month period, we won’t have delivered any extra cars but we will have spent a lot of money and burned ourselves out to accelerate deliveries in the last two weeks of each quarter.

We will still have quite a big wave of deliveries in the last few weeks of December, as we don’t yet have high volume production either in Europe or Texas, which means a lot of cars on boats from China to Europe and on trucks [and/or] rail from California to the East Coast arriving late in the quarter, but this is nonetheless the right time to start reducing the size of the wave in favor of a steadier and more efficient pace of deliveries.

The right principle is take the most efficient action, as though we were not publicly-traded and the notion of “end of quarter” didn’t exist.

Thanks,
Elon

ShareTweetPin

Related Posts

The second-half is ‘not looking good’: Strategists on how to weather the market storm

by
July 5, 2022
0

A trader works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), June 27, 2022. Brendan McDermid | Reuters...

Tesla Pauses Plants After Ending Shaky Quarter With a Production Milestone

by
July 5, 2022
0

Bloomberg US Recession Isn’t Goldman’s Base Case, Macro Strategist Says (Bloomberg) -- The base-case expectation isn’t for a recession in...

Stock futures rise after another losing week on Wall Street

by
July 5, 2022
0

Traders on the floor of the NYSE, July 1, 2022. Source: NYSE Stock futures inched higher in overnight trading after...

European stocks head for higher open as global markets look for gains after rout

by
July 5, 2022
0

LONDON -- European stocks are expected to open higher on Tuesday as global markets look to cement gains after a...

South Korea stocks lead broad gains in Asia; Reserve Bank of Australia hikes rates as expected

by
July 5, 2022
0

SINGAPORE -- Shares in the Asia-Pacific mostly traded higher as investors look ahead to the Reserve Bank of Australia's rate...

Next Post

Li Auto Stock Near Buy Points With Earnings Due, Amid EV Sector Slump

Covid variant spreads to UK, Germany and Italy

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

email

Get the daily email about stock.

Please Enter Your Email Address:

By opting in you agree to our Privacy Policy. You also agree to receive emails from us and our affiliates. Remember that you can opt-out any time, we hate spam too!

MOST VIEWED

  • Crocs sees fourth-quarter sales up 42%, CEO Andrew Rees says 2021 was ‘exceptional year’

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Buying a car from the factory sounds expensive, but it can actually save you money. Here’s how to do it.

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Roth TSP vs. Roth IRA: How Do They Compare?

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The states that won’t tax military retirement in 2022

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Allbirds stock has plunged 50% in two months, now one top analyst says buy it

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Home
  • Trading News
  • Email Whitelisting
  • Privacy Policy
All rights reserved by www.stockmarket-cafe.com
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Trading News
  • Email Whitelisting
  • Privacy Policy

All rights reserved by www.stockmarket-cafe.com