Tesla races ahead of rising costs with price hikes

Elon Musk in line for $23bn in new payouts as results exceed Wall Street expectations

Tesla results surged past Wall Street expectations on Wednesday, as higher prices helped insulate the electric vehicle maker from supply chain chaos and rising costs.

The results also should trigger $23 billion in new payouts to chief executive Elon Musk, already the world's richest man.

Tesla has been an outlier since the pandemic outbreak, posting record deliveries and earnings for several quarters when rivals wrestling with global supply chain snarls rolled out production halts.

Shares of Tesla rose 5 per cent after the close of regular trading.

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On an investor conference call, Mr Musk said Tesla has a reasonable shot at achieving 60 per cent vehicle delivery growth this year and remained confident of seeing 50 per cent annual delivery growth for several years.

Tesla raised its prices in China, the United States and other countries, after Musk said in March the US electric carmaker was facing significant inflationary pressure in raw materials and logistics amid the crisis in Ukraine.

“Our own factories have been running below capacity for several quarters as supply chain became the main limiting factor, which is likely to continue through the rest of 2022,” Tesla said in a statement.

The price increases are designed to cover higher costs for the next six to 12 months, which protects Tesla on orders for cars that it may not deliver for a year.

"Price increases are nicely exceeding cost inflation," said Craig Irwin at Roth Capital.

"Chinese production issues seem well managed, and we expect Austin and Berlin to make up the slack from Shanghai's 19-day outage," he said referring to Tesla's two new factories in Texas and Germany which have started deliveries in recent months

The results let Mr Musk meet a hat trick of performance goals worth a combined $23 billion in new compensation. He receives no salary and his pay package requires Tesla’s market capitalisation and financial growth to hit a series of escalating targets.

The world’s most valuable carmaker said revenue was $18.8 billion in the first quarter ended March 31st, versus estimates of $17.8 billion, according to IBES data from Refinitiv. This is up 81 per cent from a year earlier.

Revenue from sales of its regulatory credits to other automakers jumped 31 per cent to $679 million in the first quarter from a year earlier, helping boost revenue and profits.

Its earnings per share was $3.22, beatings analysts’ estimates of $2.26.

Tesla’s pretax profit (ebitda) per vehicle delivered rose by more than 60 per cent to $16,203 in the latest quarter compared with a year earlier.

Tesla said it has lost about a month of build volume out of its Shanghai factory due to Covid-related shutdowns. It said production is resuming at limited levels, which will impact total build and delivery volume in the second quarter.

Musk expected Tesla’s total production in the current quarter to be similar to that of the first quarter.

Lithium limits

Mr Musk said lithium is responsible for cost increases and “a limiting factor” to EV growth.

He encouraged companies to get into the lithium business, which he said would generate high margins thanks to high prices.

“The lithium margins right now are practically software margins . . . Do you like minting money? Well, the lithium business is for you.”

He also said Tesla would have “some exciting announcements in the months to come” regarding securing raw materials for batteries.

Mr Musk said its own 4680 battery cells would become a risk to production next year if it does not solve volume production by early 2023. “But we’re highly confident of doing so.” He also said as a risk mitigation, it will also use its existing, 2170 batteries for vehicles being made in Texas.

Mr Musk said Tesla expects to mass produce a robotaxi with no steering wheel or pedal by 2024.

During the call, Mr Musk did not mention Twitter, which he offered to buy last week for $43 billion. Investors are concerned that he may sell some Tesla stocks or borrow against additional Tesla shares to finance his bid.

Investors also worry about Musk being distracted by his Twitter bid at a time when Tesla is ramping up production at new factories in Berlin and Texas.

“Factory ramps take time, and Gigafactory Austin and Gigafactory Berlin-Brandenburg will be no different,” Tesla said in a statement.

The new factories will be key to meeting demand and reducing reliance on its China factory, its biggest one, which is recovering from a plant shutdown. – Reuters