by winston » Fri Oct 21, 2022 7:56 am
vested
Tesla, Inc. (TSLA)
As you may recall, Tesla had reported 343,000 total deliveries, which missed analysts’ expectations of 364,660.
That said, as reported by the Wall Street Journal, deliveries were up roughly 42% from last year’s third quarter, when Tesla delivered 241,000 vehicles.
I said, while they fell short of expectations, the company’s deliveries are expected to help Tesla post its highest quarterly sales and record profits of $3.34 billion.
So no, the company didn’t deliver as many cars as analysts wanted. But the fact is, Tesla has survived the chip shortage better than most automakers because the company learned how to reprogram its cars.
Earnings of $1.05 per share beat expectations for earnings of $1.01.
While the company also reported its highest ever quarterly revenue of $21.5 billion, that still fell short of expectations for $22.09 billion.
Vehicle pricing helped Tesla grab almost $3.3 billion in profit during the third quarter, just shy of the company’s record in the first quarter.
Back on the vehicle delivery front, Tesla would have to deliver 500,000 cars in the next three months to hit its 2022 target of boosting vehicle deliveries by 50% year-over-year. To that end, the company expects to come up just shy.
During the call, CEO Elon Musk cited ongoing supply chain issues for the company’s miss.
He said:
There weren't enough boats, there weren't enough trains, there weren't enough car carriers. Tesla got too big. I can't emphasize enough we have excellent demand for [the fourth quarter] and we expect to sell every car we can make as far in the future as we can see. To be frank, we're very pedal to the metal come rain or shine. We are not reducing our production in any meaningful way, recession or not recession.
Unfortunately for Tesla, we’re in a market environment where a company can’t just report good earnings, it must also guide higher.
And while Elon Musk did provide strong fourth-quarter guidance, it didn’t work to help the stock price. Clearly, he’s losing some of his credibility, which I find interesting.
Source: Investor Place
It's all about "how much you made when you were right" & "how little you lost when you were wrong"