Los Angeles Times

Musk erupts on Tesla earnings call over ‘fascist’ order

- By Russ Mitchell

Elon Musk’s emotional eruption on a conference call with analysts Wednesday followed a couple of highstress events — and a financial report that indicates that Tesla may need to raise more capital.

That morning, the Tesla chief executive held a video chat with Li Qiang. Li is a powerful member of the Chinese Communist Party politburo. He’s party secretary for Shanghai, where Tesla’s new automotive factory is located.

The meeting was cordial, according to Shanghai media. But both men know Tesla has agreed to repay Chinese financial backers almost $1.6 billion its Shanghai subsidiary is borrowing to build and equip the factory and use for working capital. Tesla could be forced to forfeit its operations if the money is not fully repaid by December 2024.

Later in the day, six San Francisco Bay Area counties announced an extension of their shelter-in-place orders through May. That meant Tesla’s Fremont factory, closed since March 25, was barred from building cars there at least another full month, crimping sales and cash flow.

There is no indication that Tesla will be unable to meet its China obligation­s. But it took only one question to trigger Musk.

Adam Jonas, stock analyst at Morgan Stanley, asked for a “real-time update on company liquidity at the end of April.” That’s a polite Wall Street way of asking if a company’s flush enough to pay its bills.

Musk lit into the county lockdown. “Outrage. It’s an outrage!” he said.

The order, he claimed, is “forcibly imprisonin­g people in their homes against all of their constituti­onal rights,” which is “not why people came to America and built this country.”

After lauding China’s infrastruc­ture and criticizin­g the U.S. for the state of its airports and its “crumbling highways and bridges,” Musk launched back into the close-down order: “If somebody wants to stay in the house, that’s great … but to say they cannot leave their house and they will be arrested if they do, this is fascist. This is not democratic. This is not freedom. Give people back their goddamn freedom!”

Musk had already vented his frustratio­n over the closures on social media, tweeting the previous evening “FREE AMERICA NOW.”

In fact, the county orders allow people to leave their homes, though they’re required to wear masks and keep a safe distance from others.

If Musk is a bit tetchy about Tesla’s current financial state, you can’t blame him. COVID-19 and the collapse of automobile sales have the whole industry worried.

Tesla, which had forecast production of 500,000 cars this year (up from 378,000 in 2019) said in its earnings update letter to investors it can’t forecast net income and free cash flow given current conditions, and it put its 500,000-car goal on ice.

The company’s firstquart­er results, which were detailed in an official 10-Q filing Thursday, were mixed. The company hit $5.98 billion in revenue, 32% higher than the same quarter last year. Because Musk continued to build cars through most of March, a week of that in defiance of closedown orders, the effect on quarterly sales was minor.

Tesla posted net income of $16 million, scoring for the first time a profit three quarters in a row. But that profit was based on $354 million in regulatory credits that the electric-car maker sold to other auto companies to meet environmen­tal regulation­s, compared with $216 million in 2019’s first quarter. Sans those credits, the performanc­e of Tesla’s core auto and energy businesses would have forced a reported loss of hundreds of millions of dollars.

Free cash flow available for reinvestme­nt wasn’t pretty, with a negative $895 million flowing out to pay debt and bills, and not in to fund company growth.

Tesla’s top numbers man, Zachary Kirkhorn, told analysts much of that shortfall is due to late deliveries caused by the coronaviru­s outbreak. He said the next 18 months will bring some “ups and downs” in liquidity but was silent on details.

The company reported about $8 billion in cash on hand as of March 31 but wouldn’t say how much of that is left now. “I don’t have any more color to provide,” Kirkhorn told analysts.

Thursday’s 10-Q report said Tesla has “assessed the impact” of the COVID-19 pandemic and is “not aware of any specific events or circumstan­ces” that require the company to update the value of its assets and liabilitie­s.

Where new money will come from is unclear. In Musk’s early days at Tesla, he claimed each new line of vehicles would be so profitable the company could fund the next line of vehicles internally. That hasn’t come close to happening.

The company has never registered an annual profit since it went public in 2010. But it’s stayed alive so far because Musk has proved himself a master at raising money. While losses have mounted, Musk kept selling stock and issuing debt, a total of $18.45 billion to date. That includes a $2.3-billion stock sale in February.

A new stock issue or debt offering could shore up Tesla’s cash balance and provide enough capital to keep Musk’s growth story alive. That future-is-bright narrative has lifted Tesla’s share price by 87% this year, to $781.88 Tuesday, albeit down from its all-time high closing of $917.42 in mid-February. That gives the company a market value of $144 billion.

Before his outburst, Musk spent much of the conference call painting a rosy picture of Tesla’s future. He said a 50% compound yearover-year growth rate in vehicle production for the next decade is “likely,” though he added: “It’s possible that it’s 40%. I will be very shocked if it’s less than 40% even with a force majeure, short of World War III.”

At 40%, that would mean the company would be making 14.46 million vehicles a year worldwide by 2030.

The company is building a new Model Y SUV assembly line in Shanghai and a new factory in Brandenbur­g, Germany, both scheduled for completion next year. The Shanghai plant is currently building Model 3 sedans, with a new building for a Model Y assembly line under constructi­on. Musk has also hinted at a Texas site for the Cyber truck, its electric pickup truck.

Meantime, Musk is anxiously waiting for Fremont to reopen.

 ?? Frederic J. Brown AFP/Getty ?? CEO Elon Musk, asked about Tesla’s liquidity, launched into a tirade against shutdown orders.
Frederic J. Brown AFP/Getty CEO Elon Musk, asked about Tesla’s liquidity, launched into a tirade against shutdown orders.

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