Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Tesla cuts prices as demand weakens

Move will make some electric-vehicle models eligible for federal tax credit

- TOM KRISHER

With its sales slowing and its stock price tumbling, Tesla Inc. slashed prices Friday on several versions of its electric vehicles, making some of its models eligible for a new federal tax credit that could help spur buyer interest.

The company dropped prices nearly 20% in the United States on some versions of the Model Y SUV, its top seller. That cut will make more versions of the Model Y eligible for a $7,500 electric-vehicle tax credit that will be available through March. Tesla also reduced the base price of the Model 3, its least expensive model, by about 6%.

Far from pleasing investors, the sharp price cuts sent shares of Tesla Inc. down nearly 4% in midday trading Friday, before a rebound to close little changed at $122.40 on the day in New York.

Since the start of the year, the stock has plummeted more than 65%. Many investors fear that Tesla’s sales slowdown will persist and have grown concerned about the erratic behavior of CEO Elon Musk and the distractio­ns caused by his $44 billion purchase of Twitter.

“I think the real driver for all of this is falling demand for Teslas,” said Guidehouse Research e-Mobility analyst Sam Abuelsamid.

Itay Michaeli, an industry analyst at Citigroup, wrote in a note to investors that Tesla appears to be prioritizi­ng sales volume over price — a strategy that could affect its profit margins, at least in the near term.

Messages were left Friday seeking a comment from Tesla.

The Model Y Performanc­e version, formerly priced at nearly $70,000, now starts at just under $57,000. The starting price of the Model 3, Tesla’s lowest-priced vehicle, was cut to just under $44,000 from $47,000.

The company’s decision to drop the base price of the Model 3, which had already been eligible for the federal tax credit, is a clear sign that demand had weakened, Abuelsamid noted.

Tesla has added two factories, one in Austin, Texas, and the other in Berlin, that are running at only a fraction of their output capacities, “which is undoubtedl­y costing them dearly,” Abuelsamid said.

 ?? (AP) ?? A Tesla sedan charges at a Tesla Supercharg­ing station in November at Cranberry, Pa.
(AP) A Tesla sedan charges at a Tesla Supercharg­ing station in November at Cranberry, Pa.

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