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Tesla Reports Third-Quarter Profit That Beats Market Expectations (cnbc.com)

Rei writes: When Tesla announced late last year that it was targeting sustained profitability in the second half of 2018, reaffirming this target throughout the year, the markets reacted with skepticism. Indeed, despite repeated insistence that the company had no need for a capital round, news analysts have treated the concept of Tesla dilution to raise more capital as inevitable and urgent to pay off convertible bonds next spring, even suggesting insidious theories that the reason it hadn't was that it "couldn't."

Well, today Tesla put the doubts to rest with a blockbuster Q3 report -- not simply eking out a profit and small free cash flow growth, but $2.92 per-share profit and $881 million free cash flow -- almost raising the entire value of their convertible bond debt in a single quarter. While many were skeptical about Tesla's claims that it would go from near zero profit margin on Model 3s to their claimed target of 15%, Tesla instead hit a 20% margin on the Model 3 (now the highest-revenue car in the U.S.), with a 25.8% overall automotive gross margin. This was all achieved with only $52 million worth of zero-emission vehicle credits claimed this quarter. While Tesla bears will likely claim that this quarter was a one-off that won't be repeated, Tesla reiterates guidance for sustained profitability from herein, barring a force majeure event.

2 of 195 comments (clear)

  1. Re: Waiting to hear... by saloomy · · Score: 5, Informative

    Not so. They report bot produced and delivered cars. Just take a look at the report to understand the company financials. It's much more intelligent than just talking out of your ass:

    The Latest 10-q
    The Update Letter

    Both of those documents are SEC filed.

  2. Re: Waiting to hear... by saloomy · · Score: 5, Informative

    Your point was that they were not following GAAP accounting. Had you taken my advice and read the report I conveniently linked to you, you would have seen the very first sentence : Q2 Automotive gross margin increased to 20.6% GAAP and 21.0% non-GAAP.

    Thats their profit margin. Also, FYI, you book revenue when you ship, not produce. So having 13k vehicles in inventory is a drag on their balance sheet, not a boost.