These would seem to be heady times for Elon Musk. Recently, he announced that SpaceX, his space exploration and tourism company, has developed plans to colonize Mars and save humanity. A little more down to earth, the billionaire mogul reported this week that Tesla, his boutique electric car manufacturer, had turned a modest profit in the third quarter. On Friday, at a press event staged in a neighborhood of solar houses, he revealed that SolarCity, a solar roof company where he serves as chairman, has devised new less bulky solar panels. Were these announcements relevant pieces of news released to inform the consumer or were they merely diversions meant to distract from the serious problems brewing at Musk's three enterprises?
Early in his career, Musk, now 45, made so much money that Silicon Valley viewed him as a visionary. He sold his first startup, Zip2, to Compaq for $ 305 million, earning him $ 22 million; he then helped found PayPal, which sold to eBay for $ 1.5 billion, netting him $ 180 million. But with the three companies he now runs he has proven to be, as a businessman at least, ineffective at best, cynical at worst. All three companies are beset by debt and cash flow issues. Yet each time it appears as if his house of cards may collapse, Musk makes a move — often a splashy announcement of a new product — to change the conversation from his impending financial doom.
Normally, Musk enjoys glowing media coverage — even after his rockets and "auto-pilot" navigation cause lethal crashes — but this month he was called out by Robert E. Murray, CEO of Murray Energy Corporation, the largest privately-held coal producer in America, who claimed on CNBC that Tesla is a "fraud" because the company "has gotten $ 2 billion from the taxpayer" and "has not made a penny yet in cash flow." The charge got Musk's attention. "Real fraud going on is denial of climate science," Musk responded on Twitter. "As for 'subsidies,' Tesla gets pennies on the dollar vs coal. How about we both go to zero?"
Currently, Musk has a net worth estimated at $ 13.2 billion, making him the 87th-richest person in the world, but along the way his companies have received, according to a report published last year in The Los Angeles Times, $ 4.9 billion in government subsidies. So what would happen if Tesla did "go to zero" on subsidies? It could be catastrophic, actually, because ever since 2004, when Musk invested $ 6.35 million in Tesla and became its CEO, the company has relied heavily on government support.
First of all, any customer who buys an electric car receives a $ 7,500 tax credit on his or her federal income tax — an incentive that gives Tesla a distinct competitive edge over manufacturers that make traditional vehicles. In addition, some states supplement the federal tax credit with tax breaks of their own. Nevada went much further than that. When Tesla started searching for a site on which to build a battery factory, Nevada offered $ 1.3 billion in cash and tax breaks if Tesla located it in Reno. The federal government will subsidize the batteries produced there by awarding tax breaks to consumers who buy them.
The government has also given Tesla loans. In 2010, the Department of Energy provided a $ 465 million loan, which Tesla repaid three years later. Yet despite all of this assistance, Tesla is still plagued by problems — missed deadlines, underperformance on production quotas, and blown budgets. It has also produced relatively few cars.
Through 2015, Tesla sold 106,000 vehicles since it started delivering cars in 2008. Granted the company was in a startup phase for much of that time, and is projected to produce 80,000 cars in 2016, but it seems unlikely it will hit its goal of selling 500,000 cars a year by 2018. Because of the tepid production schedule, Tesla has been losing money. In 2015, the annual loss was $ 889 million. The company's total debt has climbed from $ 401 million in June 2012 to $ 3 billion in June 2016. The announcement of a third-quarter profit for 2016 — a modest $ 22 million — was only the second time in the company's history it turned a quarterly profit; it did not result from increased productivity but from Tesla selling $ 139 million worth of pollution tax credits to other car manufacturers. Because of its questionable financial health, Goldman Sachs recently downgraded Tesla's stock from buy to neutral.
No comments:
Post a Comment