logo
Tesla reports lower car sales, extending slump

Tesla reports lower car sales, extending slump

Business Times02-07-2025
[NEW YORK] Tesla reported another hefty drop in auto sales on Wednesday, extending a difficult period amid intensifying electric vehicle competition and backlash over CEO Elon Musk's political activities.
The EV maker reported 384,122 deliveries in the second quarter, down 13.5 per cent from the year-ago period. Shares rallied after the disclosure, which was better than some leading forecasts in recent days.
The sales figures, which are global, reflect the more contested nature of the EV market, which Tesla once dominated, but which now also features BYD and other low-cost Chinese companies, as well as legacy western automakers like General Motors, Toyota and Volkswagen.
But Musk's political activism on behalf of right-wing figures has also made the company a target of boycotts and demonstrations, weighing on sales.
In recent days, Musk has revived a feud with US President Donald Trump, dragging Tesla shares lower on Tuesday.
The figures portend another poor round of earnings when Tesla reports results on July 23. Analysts currently project a drop of 16 per cent to US$1.2 billion in profits, according to S&P Capital IQ.
BT in your inbox
Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
Sign Up
Sign Up
Tesla has faced questions about a lack of new retail auto products to wow consumers after Musk's futuristic Cybertruck proved polarising.
Analysts will be looking for an update on the state of new offerings after Tesla said in April that it planned 'more affordable models' in the first half of 2025.
The company has begun deliveries of its revamped Model Y in some markets, according to news reports.
Tesla launched a long-discussed robotaxi venture in the Texas state capital Austin, lending momentum to Musk's branding of the company as at the forefront of autonomous and artificial intelligence technology.
But reports that the self-driving cars have driven recklessly have prompted oversight from US regulators.
Heading into Wednesday's data release, notes from JPMorgan Chase and Deutsche Bank had forecast bigger drops in second-quarter deliveries, citing poor figures in Europe in particular.
The JPMorgan note was especially bearish, setting a December share price target of US$115, down more than 60 per cent from current levels and citing an expected drag from the elimination of US tax credits for EVs under Trump's signature domestic policy legislation moving through Congress.
Following the results, Morningstar said in a note that Tesla would not see 'meaningful deliveries growth without a new lower-cost vehicle aimed at the affordable market.'
For the second quarter in a row, Tesla produced more vehicles than it delivered, 'raising concerns regarding demand and inventory levels,' said a note from CFRA Research that called the figures 'a modest disappointment.'
But Wedbush's Dan Ives said Wednesday's 'better-than-feared' report set the stage for growth.
'If Musk continues to lead and remain in the driver's seat, we believe Tesla is on a path to an accelerated growth path over the coming years with deliveries expected to ramp in the back-half of 2025 following the Model Y refresh cycle,' Ives said.
Political wildcard
A wildcard remains: how Musk's shifting relationship with Trump could affect Tesla.
Musk donated more than US$270 million to Trump's presidential campaign, barnstorming key battleground states for the Republican.
After the election, he oversaw the launch of the Department of Government Efficiency, a controversial initiative that eliminated thousands of government jobs deemed by Doge to be part of a pattern of waste, fraud and abuse.
But Musk has broken with Trump over the White House's flagship tax and spending bill, which Musk has called 'utterly insane and destructive.'
In response, Trump has threatened to target Musk's business empire and warned of deporting the South African-born billionaire, sending Tesla shares plummeting.
'This high-profile feud introduces political risk,' Briefing.com said in a note on Tuesday.
'The personal nature of the conflict, amplified by Trump's comments implying Tesla's reliance on subsidies for survival, has sparked fears of broader policy shifts targeting Musk's business empire.'
Tesla shares rose 4.7 per cent early on Wednesday. AFP
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Musk, X Corp to settle $500-million lawsuit over Twitter firings
Musk, X Corp to settle $500-million lawsuit over Twitter firings

CNA

time2 hours ago

  • CNA

Musk, X Corp to settle $500-million lawsuit over Twitter firings

NEW YORK :Elon Musk and his social media company X Corp have reached a tentative agreement to settle a lawsuit filed by former Twitter employees who said they were owed $500 million in severance pay. Attorneys for X Corp and the former Twitter employees reported the deal in a Wednesday court filing, in which both sides asked a U.S. appeals court to delay an upcoming court hearing so that they could finalize a deal that would pay the fired employees and end the litigation. The financial terms of the deal were not disclosed. Musk fired approximately 6,000 employees after his 2022 acquisition of Twitter, which he rebranded X. Several employees sued over their terminations and severance pay, and other lawsuits are still pending in courts in Delaware and California. The settlement would resolve a proposed class action filed in California by Courtney McMillian, who previously oversaw Twitter's employee benefits programs as its "head of total rewards," and Ronald Cooper, who was an operations manager. A federal judge in San Francisco dismissed the employees' lawsuit in July 2024, and they appealed to the San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Court of Appeals. The 9th Circuit had been scheduled to hear oral arguments on September 17. Attorneys for Musk and McMillian did not immediately respond to requests for comment on Thursday. The lawsuit argued that a 2019 severance plan guaranteed that most Twitter workers would receive two months of their base pay plus one week of pay for each full year of service if they were laid off. Senior employees such as McMillian were owed six months of base pay, according to the lawsuit. But Twitter only gave laid-off workers at most one month of severance pay, and many of them did not receive anything, according to the lawsuit. Twitter laid off more than half of its workforce as a cost-cutting measure after Musk acquired the company.

Singapore, Hong Kong want a slice of the US$250 billion stablecoin pie
Singapore, Hong Kong want a slice of the US$250 billion stablecoin pie

Business Times

time6 hours ago

  • Business Times

Singapore, Hong Kong want a slice of the US$250 billion stablecoin pie

[SINGAPORE] Regional financial centres Singapore and Hong Kong are both aiming to capture a piece of the US$250 billion stablecoin market. On Aug 1, Hong Kong launched a regulatory regime for stablecoin issuers . Some industry watchers noted that the territory might be positioning itself as a regulated gateway into mainland China. Singapore, on the other hand, finalised its Single Currency Stablecoin framework back in 2023 – a move that pundits viewed as a boost to its role as a hub for South-east Asia and the West. A stablecoin is a type of cryptocurrency that is pegged to a fiat currency, such as the US dollar, and backed by reserve assets. Popular stablecoins include USDT and USDC, which are both pegged to the greenback. In a report last month, investment firm BlackRock noted that although stablecoins are small relative to the size of the overall crypto universe, their adoption has been growing quickly since 2020. Stablecoins now make up about 7 per cent of the crypto market share, the report indicated, noting: 'We see stablecoins as a new part of the future of finance.' A NEWSLETTER FOR YOU Friday, 8.30 am Asean Business Business insights centering on South-east Asia's fast-growing economies. Sign Up Sign Up Tale of two cities Industry players noted largely similar crypto regulation in Hong Kong and Singapore. Angela Ang, head of policy and strategic partnerships for the Asia-Pacific at blockchain intelligence company TRM Labs, said that Singapore's opt-in approach gives issuers based there more flexibility in general. Describing the city-state's approach as a 'golden sticker', Samson Leo, chief legal officer of StraitsX, emphasised that unregulated stablecoins will be treated like any other cryptocurrency – traded at the user's own risk. StraitsX, aigital payment infrastructure provider, began issuing Singapore dollar-backed stablecoin XSGD in 2020. In 2024, StraitsX received full major payment institution licences from the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS). 'Every market has its own niche,' Leo said, adding that he does not think Singapore and Hong Kong are competing with each other. Singapore caters to companies in South-east Asia and acts as a bridge between the East and West, whereas Hong Kong is more of a launch pad into mainland China and Northern Asia. ' We see stablecoins as a new part of the future of finance. ' — BlackRock Ang noted that issuers are much more selective about where they issue their stablecoin tokens, adding that it is costly and unnecessary to do this in several jurisdictions. 'Whether it makes sense to do so in Singapore, Hong Kong or another jurisdiction depends on whether it offers unique advantages for a particular business model,' she said. Hassan Ahmed, Singapore country director for crypto exchange Coinbase, suggests that a potential Chinese renminbi-backed stablecoin would be a 'big catalyst' for firms to set up in Hong Kong. Fragmentation risk looms If each country around the world required its own specific stablecoin licence alongside strict licensing regulations, it would lead to 'islands' being formed, Leo said. In other words, there is a fragmentation risk. In July, US President Donald Trump unveiled the Genius Act , which regulates the use of stablecoins in the United States. It also marks the first federal framework for payment stablecoins. In addition, the Act prohibits issuers from paying interest, and limits issuance to federally regulated banks, some registered non-banks and state-chartered firms. Ahmed said that the new regulations will create some form of 'geographic interoperability issues', with which the industry will have to contend. Both he and Leo believe that despite the fragmentation of the stablecoin industry, there is still a need to regulate the tokens. 'It inspires more confidence, and it unlocks more capital to be able to participate,' Ahmed said. To prevent the risk of fragmentation, Leo cites the need for discussions at the regulator-to-regulator level. He suggested stablecoins that are recognised in one market to be recognised in another where the regulations are similar. In response to queries from The Business Times, a MAS spokesperson said that the regulator is working on legislative amendments to formalise its stablecoin framework. 'Key requirements of the stablecoin framework relate to reserve assets, capital, redemption and disclosures,' the spokesperson added. Genius Act is a tailwind Despite the looming risk of fragmentation, the market remains optimistic about the direction of the stablecoins, especially following the passing of the Genius Act. Describing the United States as a juggernaut in the digital assets ecosystem from both adoption and business standpoints, Ang of TRM Labs said that the Genius Act has created major tailwinds for stablecoin adoption worldwide. 'The stars are really aligned for the industry,' Ahmed added. Analysts from BlackRock said that new US legislation, notably the Genius Act, is set to cement the role of stablecoins as mainstream digital payment methods. They added: 'This regulation could reinforce dollar dominance by enabling a tokenised US dollar-based ecosystem for international payments.' At the financial institution level, there is also growing interest in stablecoins. 'Bank interest in stablecoin issuance has accelerated,' noted Ang. She added that greater participation from large financial institutions will drive mainstream adoption of stablecoins as a means of payment and value transfer. ' Whether it makes sense to (issue a stablecoin token) in Singapore, Hong Kong or another jurisdiction depends on whether it offers unique advantages for a particular business model. ' — Angela Ang, head of policy and strategic partnerships for the Asia-Pacific at TRM Labs StraitsX, meanwhile, has partnered Standard Chartered and DBS. The banks hold XSGD stablecoin reserves. Ahmed believes that the Genius Act will also encourage major banks and Big Tech platforms to leverage the stablecoin technology. Besides governments and lenders, payment gateways are also seeking to tap the stablecoin market. Visa, for example, is using stablecoins to improve the efficiency and utility of back-end financial and money movement infrastructure, it said on its website. Rubail Birwadker, Visa's global head of growth products and strategic partnerships, said in a Jul 31 press release: 'We believe that when stablecoins are trusted, scalable and interoperable, they can fundamentally transform how money moves around the world.' Similarly, Mastercard has also adopted stablecoins for various purposes, such as on-chain remittances. Citing the fast and cost-effective nature of stablecoins, the company said that these tokens are ideal for these uses.

Boeing in talks to sell as many as 500 planes to China: sources
Boeing in talks to sell as many as 500 planes to China: sources

Business Times

time7 hours ago

  • Business Times

Boeing in talks to sell as many as 500 planes to China: sources

[BEIJING] Boeing is heading closer towards finalising a deal with China to sell as many as 500 aircraft, according to people familiar with the matter, a transaction that would end a sales drought that stretches back to US President Donald Trump's last visit in 2017. The two sides are still hammering out terms of the complex aircraft sale, including the types and volume of jet models and delivery timetables, according to one of the people, who asked not to be identified discussing confidential matters. The mega sale to China, years in the making, is contingent on the two nations diffusing the trade hostilities that hark back to Trump's first term in office – and could still fall apart, they said. Chinese officials have already started consulting domestic airlines about how many Boeing aircraft they will need, the people said. The transaction taking shape is similar in scope to the order for as many as 500 jets that China's central planners have struck with Airbus, but have not yet announced, they added. The Boeing order is expected to be the centrepiece of a trade agreement that would benefit both Trump and China's President Xi Jinping, the culmination of long-running and sometimes contentious negotiations. The nation's leaders were close to a similar announcement in 2023, but then-President Joe Biden and Xi left a San Francisco summit without consummating an aircraft sale. Complicating matters for Boeing is a leadership void in China. Alvin Liu, its top executive in China and a fluent Mandarin-speaker with extensive government contacts, left the company in recent weeks. Carol Shen has been named interim president of Boeing China, said people familiar with the matter. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up Boeing declined to comment on any potential deal or management changes. Aircraft orders for Boeing have figured large in US diplomacy since Trump returned to the White House in January, with nations touting new, tentative and existing deals for airplanes, which are as expensive as skyscrapers, to narrow trade imbalances with the US. The US and China have engaged in several rounds of talks since de-escalating tit-for-tat tariffs that soared to as high as 145 per cent, but have yet to reach a final trade deal. Earlier in the summer, Xi, in a phone call, invited Trump to China at an unspecified date. One opportunity for the pair to meet is in late October, ahead of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in South Korea. For China, the deal would secure aircraft delivery slots that are hard to come by at both Boeing and Airbus, which are largely sold out into the 2030s. The world's second largest's aviation market is expected to more than double its commercial fleet to 9,755 airplanes over the next 20 years, by Boeing's estimation, far more than China's homegrown planemaker Comac could manufacture. The country's top economic planning agency, the National Development and Reform Commission, recently sought input from Chinese carriers about how many jets they want, one of the people said. Talks centreed on the 737 Max series of aircraft, Boeing's popular single-aisle jet, in a sign Beijing is laying the groundwork for a major order. Boeing's last Chinese deal was unveiled in November 2017 during Trump's first state visit to China. The deal amounted to orders and commitments for 300 single-aisle and twin-aisle planes valued at US$37 billion at the time. The next year, Boeing's China deliveries peaked, when a quarter of its jets ended up in the mainland. Airbus has dominated sales and deliveries to China since 2019, when the nation's regulators were the first to ground the 737 Max after two fatal accidents. Boeing has notched only 30 orders with Chinese carriers and leasing companies since the start of 2019, according to the company's website. In an interview with Bloomberg in January, chief executive officer Kelly Ortberg was optimistic that years of talks with Beijing would finally pay off. 'We certainly hope that there's an opportunity for some additional orders in the next year with China,' he said. BLOOMBERG

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store