Tesla reported a massive loss in the first quarter of 2019 as it struggled to deliver its mass-market Model 3 and faced factors including a diminished federal tax credit and slowing demand for the sport sedan.
The $702 million loss was higher than analysts forecast for the company, slightly less than the figure reported in the same quarter one year ago and a stark departure from two straight quarters of profits. Its $3.51 billion in revenue was nearly $1 billion more than the year-ago figure, on the heels of the release of Tesla's Model 3, but just over half of what Tesla reported in the fourth quarter.
For the first couple of years after Tesla began making its Model 3, the car that is was to bring electric vehicles to the masses, it faced production problems that hampered its ability to make enough cars. Now that Tesla seems to have overcome that, it is facing more difficulties delivering cars to customers.
"This was the most difficult logistics problem I have ever seen, and I have seen some tough ones," Tesla CEO Elon Musk said on an analyst call.
The figures were a troubling sign for investors in a year when Tesla has staked its future on the Model 3, expanding sales to China and Europe and shifting the majority of its sales and production from the flagship Model S and Model X SUV to a new model aimed at a wider market of consumers. Tesla is also facing criticism for not reliably delivering on its long-promised $35,000 Model 3, for production and delivery challenges, and for legal battles; Tesla announced cuts to about 7% of its workforce in January, and Musk is mired in an ongoing legal battle with the Securities and Exchange Commission over his tweets. Tesla reported $67 million in restructuring and related charges.