Los Angeles Times

Musk talks of S3X, Tesla loss

- By Russ Mitchell russ.mitchell@latimes.com Twitter: @russ1mitch­ell

SAN FRANCISCO — Elon Musk used his quarterly conference call with analysts Wednesday to talk about his sex problem. Or, more precisely, his S3X problem.

He also tried to assure investors, after Tesla reported a deepening loss for the first quarter. Its stock fell sharply on the day.

Musk said the midmarket Model 3 is on track to begin initial production in July. And he fretted about confusion over the Model 3 name and his regrets about trying to be too cute with it.

Tesla now sells two luxury cars, the Model S and the Model X. Musk wanted to call the midmarket car the Model E.

S-E-X. Get it? And there’s the upcoming Model Y.

But Ford laid previous claim to the designatio­n, and Musk went with 3, which sort of looks like a backward E, to take its place.

“The joke’s on me because it’s caused confusion in the marketplac­e,” he said. “We’re going to be a broken record on this front because we have to clear up an error.”

Tesla says Model S orders have taken a hit — just how much Musk didn’t say — because some customers think the 3 is a new version of the S, so they’re holding off on Model S purchases.

Meantime, Tesla said its net loss grew to $397.2 million, or $2.04 a share, in the first quarter. In the fourth quarter of 2016, Tesla lost $219.5 million.

First-quarter revenue was up 18.4% from the previous quarter, to $2.7 billion, and doubled from a year earlier. Car deliveries rose 12% to 25,051.

Efraim Levy, analyst at CFRA, retained his sell recommenda­tion on the highflying stock, although he’s pleased that the Model 3 seems on track. “Our view is [Tesla] is priced like it can do no wrong, but U.S. automakers can do no right.”

Cash spent on operations increased during the quarter, to $397.2 million from $219.5 million in the previous quarter, reflecting the costs of gearing up the Model 3 assembly line.

Few expect the electric car and alternativ­e energy company to make a profit for some time.

Its future now depends on the Model 3, which unlike the Tesla Model S and Model X luxury cars is aimed at a wider consumer base, with a stated entry price of $35,000.

Tesla plans a run rate of 5,000 cars a week by the end of the year, and 10,000 cars a week “at some point” in 2018. In earlier discussion­s, the company had talked about producing 500,000 cars in 2018. Last year, the company manufactur­ed about 84,000 cars total.

To meet expected demand, the company is expanding its retail stores and its Supercharg­er network. Wednesday the company said it would add nearly 100 retail, delivery and service locations. The Supercharg­er network will double in 2017, the company said, to more than 10,000 units.

Tesla’s stock fell $7.87, or 2.47%, to $311.02 at the close of trading Wednesday.

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