The second-quarter sales bring Tesla to nearly 900,000 vehicles for the first half of this year. The company sold 422,875 vehicles from January through March.
CEO Elon Musk has predicted that sales will grow about 50 per cent per year for the near future. To reach that number for the full year, the company would have to sell 1.97 million vehicles. Analysts expect Tesla to fall a little short, delivering 1.82 million vehicles for the year.
Tesla cut US prices at least four times during the quarter for vehicles ordered by customers. Larger price drops emerged on store inventory toward the end of the quarter in mid-June. The company trimmed prices on some Model 3 cars by more than US$3000. Model X SUV price cuts reached over US$10,000, and the company threw in three years of free charging for the S and X. The Model S sedan saw cuts of about US$7500.
Prices even were reduced on inventory of the Model Y small-SUV, Tesla’s top seller, by as much as US$1570 in a late June push to move vehicles.
But sales were almost certainly boosted by a US$7500 US government tax credit from the Inflation Reduction Act that was available on nearly all Tesla models during the second quarter.
Wedbush Analyst Dan Ives said price cuts in boosted sales, especially in China, but there will be a price to pay in reduced profit margins. He expects Tesla’s margins to hit bottom during the next two quarters, recovering to normal levels next year.
“We’re going to likely see the price cuts have weighed on margins,” Morningstar analyst Seth Goldstein said.
Tesla’s automotive gross profit margin (excluding regulatory credit revenue), the company’s gross profit compared to revenue, was as high as 30 per cent early last year. But as interest rates rose, Tesla began cutting prices last year, and the margin fell to 19 per cent in the first quarter. Analysts expect 16.9 per cent from April through June, according to FactSet.
Ives said Tesla’s US inventory is starting to grow. “That’s going to be a bit of an overhang going into the second half of the year,” he said.
Deliveries, he said, aren’t the whole Tesla story. With General Motors, Ford, Rivian and Volvo announcing that they’ll join Tesla’s charging network and start using its plug, Tesla will get millions in charging revenue.
“I do believe investors are starting to appreciate the sum of the parts story,” Ives said.
Shares of Tesla have more than doubled in value this year, largely on news that General Motors and Ford are joining the company’s charging network. Tesla shares closed Friday at US$261.77.
Goldstein expects that Tesla to ramp up production at new factories in Austin, Texas, and in Germany, further reducing the company’s fixed costs. “I think we’re likely looking at the bottom in the first half of this year, and then margins will slightly recover from there,” he said.