HomeNewsOpinionMusk waves goodbye to Tesla’s growth targets

Musk waves goodbye to Tesla’s growth targets

Tesla needs a cheaper EV — indeed, the industry does. Much of the blame for slowing growth in EV sales in the US in general can be put down to a product lineup skewed toward expensive, often heavyweight models

January 25, 2024 / 10:56 IST
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk

Henceforth, no company should ever say they are experiencing a slowdown. Tesla Inc. has redefined this experience as being “between two major growth waves.”

Full marks to whomever coined that surfer-dude promise of the doldrums soon giving way to another thrilling ride. Tesla’s infeasibly buoyant stock demands nothing less.

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Tesla’s fourth-quarter results, which dropped Wednesday evening, capped off a lackluster year. Despite selling roughly half a million, or 38 percent,
more vehicles in 2023, operating profit fell by a third. For that, blame a succession of price cuts to shore up demand, taking implied revenue and gross margin per vehicle down by 15 percent and 44 percent, respectively.
Moreover, having guided since early 2021 that annual growth in vehicle production would be 50 percent, compounded, it was clear that Tesla would likely miss that in 2024. Even before the results dropped, consensus estimates implied vehicle deliveries rising by just 21 percent this year.

This was all foreshadowed on the third-quarter results call when Chief Executive Elon Musk responded to a question about the 50 percent growth target by essentially mocking the question:
I mean, the risk is stating the obvious. It's not possible to have a compound growth rate of 50 percent forever, or you will exceed the mass of the known universe.