Tesla enters 'production hell' on Model 3 as it posts worst loss ever

Manufacturing glitches pushes back planned 5,000 units a month output prediction as firm burns through more billions

Tesla still has not figured out how to overcome manufacturing challenges that threaten its viability as an car maker, with battery factory-line glitches pushing out production targets for the Model 3 saloon.

The company won’t make 5,000 units per week of its cheapest car until sometime in March, three months later than planned. “I have to tell you I was really depressed about three or four weeks ago,” chief executive Elon Musk said after Tesla reported a record quarterly loss and cash burn, according to Bloomberg.

But he downplayed the delay. “In the grand scheme of things,” he said, “this is a relatively small shift.”

Investors were not so sure: Tesla shares fell 5 per cent to US$304.90 after the close of regular trading.

Tesla posted a net loss of $619.4 million, or $3.70 per share - its biggest quarterly loss ever - for the third quarter ended September 30 compared with a profit of $21.9m, or 14 cents per share, a year earlier, Reuters said.

Revenue rose 30 per cent to $2.98 billion. Excluding items, the company lost $2.92 per share.

Tesla warned that its adjusted gross margin would decline to about 15 per cent due to a higher mix of lower-margin Model 3 deliveries in the fourth quarter, but then recover in the first quarter of 2018.

Last month, Tesla reported it delivered 26,150 vehicles in the third quarter, a 4.5 per cent rise on the same period of 2016.

The early setbacks Tesla has had making the Model 3 lengthens the wait for hundreds of thousands of reservation holders and extends the pay-off period for the billions of dollars the company has spent to expand, Bloomberg said. The manufacturing snags will embolden sceptics who have doubted the company’s ability to quickly reach mass production, a feat the youngest US car maker is trying to pull off for the first time with a car that starts at US$35,000.

“A spike in capital spending and cash burn ahead of the Model 3 ramp will keep the bull and bear debate very heated,” said James Albertine, a Consumer Edge Research analyst. “There is not as much cushion in shares now for subsequent delays.”

Tesla burned $1.42 billion in cash in the third quarter. The California-based car maker is spending heavily on both its auto assembly plant and at its battery gigafactory, contributing to an adjusted lost per share of $2.92 per share, worse than analysts estimated.

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The main constraint holding back Model 3 output has been on the assembly line that packages battery cells at Tesla’s gigafactory in Nevada, which Mr Musk blamed in part on a subcontractor that “really dropped the ball.” Software had to be rewritten from scratch and mechanical and electrical elements of one area of the plant had to be redone.

Speaking from the plant, he later faulted himself for picking the wrong subcontractor. He recalled being on the assembly line at 2am on a Sunday to help diagnose robot calibration issues and said work was being done seven days a week to solve the issues vexing the gigafactory. “One should lead from the front lines and that’s why I’m here,” he said.

Just three months ago, Tesla said it would make 10,000 Model 3 cars per week in 2018. But during a call with analysts, Mr Musk hesitated to reaffirm that guidance, saying more information about the outlook for next year would come after the fourth quarter.

Mr Musk and the chief financial officer Deepak Ahuja wrote to shareholders that it was difficult to predict how long it will take to resolve all bottlenecks, or when new ones will emerge.

Some of Tesla’s manufacturing lines, including those for drive units, seats, paint and stamping, have the ability to make more than 1,000 cars per week during “burst builds of short duration”, they wrote. Battery-pack assembly, body-shop welding and final assembly are able to make about half as much and are ramping up quickly.

The costlier Model S saloon and Model X crossover are on pace for about 100,000 deliveries in 2017, an increase of more than 30 per cent from last year. That said, the company forecast that output of those vehicles will fall about 10 per cent in the fourth quarter from the previous three months. Mr Musk said Tesla will be selling down inventory and workers will be shifting to Model 3 assembly lines.

He lashed out against reports of Tesla firings following recent performance reviews by the company, saying that about 700 people were dismissed out of 33,000 from the company.

Mr Musk predicted to employees in July that Tesla would be entering a period of “production hell” getting Model 3 manufacturing started. Asked by an analyst how hot it was at the moment, he channelled Dante, saying the company was nine levels deep - the worst place it could be - and moving up to level eight.

“Now, I can see sort of a clear path to sunshine,” he said.

“It’s very obvious what we need to do. It’s just a matter of work to get there.”

Updated: November 02, 2017, 9:37 AM