Earnings Prospect | What is the focus of Tesla’s Q1 earnings report? Subsequent production recovery is key

Source: US-Hong Kong Telecom

Tesla’s adjusted earnings per share in Q1 2022 more than doubled year-over-year to $2.26, according to FactSet analyst estimates. Revenue is expected to rise 69% to $17.595 billion.

On April 20, local time, after the U.S. stock market closed, Tesla will announce its 2022 Q1 financial report, and the market will pay close attention to whether it can continue to maintain a high growth rate.

Tesla Earnings Expectations

Tesla’s adjusted earnings per share more than doubled year over year to $2.26, according to FactSet analyst estimates. Revenue is expected to rise 69% to $17.595 billion. For the full year of fiscal 2022, some analysts expect adjusted earnings per share to grow by 67.7%, a significant slowdown from the previous year. Full-year revenue is expected to grow 58.6%, also slowing from the previous year.

Key Metrics: Yield Data

Some investors will focus on Tesla’s vehicle production figures this quarter, which were released in early April, to gauge whether Tesla met financial guidance given in the first quarter of last year. Tesla produced 305,407 vehicles in the first quarter, a sharp increase from a year earlier but slightly below analysts’ estimates of about 311,600 vehicles. In addition, deliveries in the first quarter reached 310,048 units, a year-on-year increase of 68%.

Over the past year, Tesla has faced enormous challenges from global supply chain disruptions. At the end of March this year, Tesla’s Shanghai plant was temporarily suspended, and production was hit to a certain extent. According to the latest news from the media, 8,000 employees of Tesla’s Shanghai factory have arrived, and production will officially resume on April 19. It is worth mentioning that there is market awareness that even after the restart, production will be limited for a period of time, and it may not return to the production level before the shutdown until mid-May or later.

Analysts at Wedbush Securities said the ongoing chip shortage affects all automakers and their supply chains, but Tesla is doing better than expected. Tesla’s Berlin plant started production in March; April 7th, the Austin, Texas plant started production. According to reports, the Berlin plant is currently producing just 350 cars a week, and it hopes to ramp up production to about 1,000 electric cars a week by the end of the year and 10,000 a week by the end of the year.

Having said that, the Berlin factory still has demand for batteries and some other components from the Shanghai factory. It’s unclear how the shutdown and logistical issues at Tesla’s Shanghai plant will affect the Berlin plant.

Looking back at last year, Tesla’s vehicle production grew by about 82.5%, the highest annual growth rate since fiscal 2018. Among them, last year’s Q2 performance was exceptionally strong, with production rising by about 150.9% year-on-year. This rate briefly slowed to 64.0% in Q3, and then increased to 70.1% in Q4. Tesla’s Q1 car production in fiscal 2022 increased by 69.4% year-on-year, which was less than market expectations. For the full year of fiscal 2022, analysts expect Tesla to produce about 1.5 million vehicles, a 64% increase from the previous year. But it’s unclear to what extent analysts are taking Tesla Shanghai’s low production volumes into account at this stage.

Musk wants to buy Twitter

Musk had just finished the unveiling ceremony of the Texas Gigafactory, and he turned his attention to Twitter amid the applause, seemingly determined to win this fiery social platform. Musk, a diehard Twitter fan who owns 9.2 percent of Twitter, made a $43 billion offer a week ago. Analysts and investors alike wondered if Musk would sell some Tesla shares to raise money. Such a move could lead to a drop in Tesla’s stock price, but he could also fund the acquisition by mortgaging his Tesla shares.

It is unclear whether Musk will succeed in acquiring Twitter. Twitter launched a “poison pill” plan on Friday to prevent Musk from significantly increasing his stake in Twitter. If Musk holds 15% or more, the practice gives Twitter shareholders the right to dilute Musk’s stake by selling large shares to existing shareholders through equity dilution, thereby increasing the cost of the acquisition.

Musk has made trouble on Twitter before. In August 2018, Musk tweeted that he would take Tesla private if its stock price hit $420 a share, and he has a lot of money. At the time, this was almost impossible. Musk was subsequently charged with fraud by the SEC. To settle, Musk was forced to resign as chairman of Tesla’s board, and both he and the company were ordered to pay $20 million in fines.

Shares of Tesla have outperformed the broader market over the past year. The stock underperformed the broader market for much of the first half of last year; then it surged from early October and has outperformed since then; it gave back some of its gains after peaking in early November. It has delivered a total return of 34.5% over the past year, well above the S&P’s 6.5% total return.

Editor/Corrine

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