logo
Musk damaged Teslas brand in just few months, fixing it will likely take longer

Musk damaged Teslas brand in just few months, fixing it will likely take longer

Mint23-04-2025

New York, Elon Musk has been called a Moonshot Master, the Edison of Our Age and the Architect of the Future, but he's got a big problem at his car company and it's not clear he can fix it: damage to its brand.
Sales have plunged for Tesla amid protests and boycotts over Musk's embrace of far right-wing views. Profits have been sliced by two-thirds so far this year, and rivals from China, Europe and the US are pouncing.
On Tuesday came some relief as Musk announced in an earnings call with investors that he would be scaling back his government cost-cutting job in Washington to a 'day or two per week" to focus more on his old job as Tesla's boss.
Investors pushed up Tesla's stock 5 per cent Wednesday, though there are plenty of challenges ahead.
Musk seemed to downplay the role that brand damage played in the drop in first-quarter sales on the investor call. Instead, he emphasised something more fleeting — an upgrade to Tesla's best-selling Model Y that forced a shutdown of factories and pinched both supply and demand.
While financial analysts following the company have noted that potential buyers probably held back while waiting for the upgrade, hurting results, even the most bullish among them say the brand damage is real, and more worrisome.
'This is a full blown crisis,' said Wedbush Securities' normally upbeat Dan Ives earlier this month. In a note to its clients, JP Morgan warned of 'unprecedented brand damage."
Musk's take on the protests
Musk dismissed the protests against Tesla on the call as the work of people angry at his leadership of the Department of Government Efficiency because 'those who are receiving the waste and fraud wish it to continue.'
But the protests in Europe, thousands of miles from Washington, came after Musk supported far-right politicians there. Angry Europeans hung Musk in effigy in Milan, projected an image of him doing a straight-arm salute on a Tesla factory in Berlin and put up posters in London urging people not to buy 'Swasticars' from him.
Sales in Europe have gone into a free fall in the first three months of this year — down 39 per cent. In Germany, sales plunged 62 per cent.
Another worrying sign: On Tuesday, Tesla backed off its earlier promise that sales would recover this year after dropping in 2024 for the first time a dozen years. Tesla said the global trade situation was too uncertain and declined to repeat the forecast.
Meanwhile, Tesla's competition is stealing its customers.
Among its fiercest rivals now is Chinese giant BYD. Earlier this year, the EV maker announced it had developed an electric battery that can charge within minutes. And Tesla's European rivals have begun offering new models with advanced technology that is making them real Tesla alternatives just as popular opinion has turned against Musk.
Tesla's share of the EV market in the US has dropped from two-thirds to less than half, according to Cox Automotive.
Pinning hopes on cybercabs
Another rival, Google parent Alphabet, is already ahead of Tesla in an area that Musk has promised will help remake his company: Cybercabs.
One of the highlights of Tesla's call Tuesday was Musk sticking with his previous prediction that it will launch driverless cabs without steering wheels and pedals in Austin, Texas, in June, and in other cities soon after.
But Google's service, called Waymo, already has logged millions of driverless cybercab trips in San Francisco, Phoenix, Los Angeles, and Austin as part of a partnership with ride-hailing leader Uber.
A driverless future for Tesla owners?
Musk also told analysts that this driverless capability will be available on the Tesla vehicles already on the road through software updates over the air, and put a timeline on it: 'There will be millions of Teslas operating autonomously in the second half of the year."
But he has made similar promises before, only to miss his deadlines, such as in April 2019 when he vowed full automation by the end of the next year. He repeated the prediction, moving up the date, several more times, in following years.
A big problem is federal investigators have not given the all-clear that Tesla vehicles can drive completely on their own safely. Among other probes, safety regulators are looking into Tesla's so-called Full Self-Driving, which is only partial self-driving, for its tie to accidents in low-visibility conditions like when there is sun glare.
In competition with rivals in the US, Tesla currently has one clear advantage: It will get hurt by less by tariffs because most of its vehicles are built in the countries where they are sold, including those in its biggest market, the US.
'Tariffs are still tough on a company where margins are still low, but we do have localised supply chains,' Musk said Tuesday. 'That puts us in a strong position.'
The company also reconfirmed that a cheaper version of its best-selling vehicle, the Model Y sport utility vehicle, will be ready for customers in the first half of this year. That could help boost sales.
Another plus: The company had a blow out first quarter in its energy storage business. And Musk has promised to be producing 5,000 Optimus robots, another Tesla business, by the end of the year.
Even after falling nearly 50 per cent from its December highs, Tesla's stock is still very richly valued based on the one yardstick that really matters in the long run: its earnings.
At 110 times its expected per share earnings this year, the stock is valued more than 25 times higher than General Motors. The average stock on in the S&P 500 index trades at less than 20 times earnings.
That leaves Tesla little margin for error if something goes wrong. GRS GRS
This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.
First Published: 24 Apr 2025, 03:40 AM IST

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'Tired, Stressed': Errol Musk Blames ‘PTSD' For His Son's Public Fallout With Donald Trump
'Tired, Stressed': Errol Musk Blames ‘PTSD' For His Son's Public Fallout With Donald Trump

News18

timean hour ago

  • News18

'Tired, Stressed': Errol Musk Blames ‘PTSD' For His Son's Public Fallout With Donald Trump

Last Updated: According to Errol Musk, the two individuals have been under stress for the past five months, with the bill serving as the breaking point that escalated their tensions. Tech billionaire Elon Musk's father, Errol Musk has claimed that his son's outburst against US President Donald Trump was a result of 'PTSD' incurred during his time in the White House, adding that his son erred by confronting Trump, who he believed was ultimately going to win their contentious dispute. The senior Musk made the remark in Moscow, where he is expected to address a forum organised by Vladimir Putin's closest aides. The Tesla CEO and the Republican leader had a bitter, public fall out after the former criticised the Trump administration's recent 'Big, Beautiful Bill." 'So they had an argument about that [bill], and as they are all suffering from a bit of PTSD, a post-traumatic stress disorder over the last few months, they started hitting out at each other," Errol Said as reported by Metro. 'But unfortunately, he doesn't realise that in order to get their votes in the Senate and the Congress, Trump has to do that," he added. According to Musk Sr, the two prominent figures had been under considerable stress for the past five months, with the bill serving as the breaking point that escalated their tensions. 'They are the only two people left in the arena, Trump and Elon, and all they were used to was fighting with the opposition. They've been under a lot of stress for five months. And it gives them a break. You know, they've had to get rid of all the opposition, try and put the country back on track, and do normal things and so forth," Errol said. Musk-Trump Feud Once close allies, Donald Trump and Elon Musk are now locked in a public feud that has rapidly escalated. The fallout began after Musk strongly criticised Trump's sweeping tax and domestic policy bill, calling it a 'disgusting abomination". What began as a policy disagreement quickly became personal, with both sides exchanging insults online and in private meetings. Musk even resurfaced old quotes from Trump and GOP leaders about spending and deficits, further fuelling tensions. In response, Trump suggested severing federal ties with Musk's companies. Just weeks ago, Musk was still being honoured as a trusted advisor to the administration; now, the relationship appears to have completely broken down. First Published: June 09, 2025, 07:44 IST

Republicans will pass Trump's tax bill: Speaker Mike Johnson
Republicans will pass Trump's tax bill: Speaker Mike Johnson

Time of India

time2 hours ago

  • Time of India

Republicans will pass Trump's tax bill: Speaker Mike Johnson

WASHINGTON: With an uncharacteristically feistiness, speaker Mike Johnson took clear sides Sunday in President Trump's breakup with billionaire Elon Musk. The Republican House leader and staunch Trump ally said Musk's criticism of GOP's massive tax and budget policy bill will not derail the measure, and he downplayed Musk's influence over GOP-controlled Congress. "I didn't go out to craft a piece of legislation to please the richest man in the world," Johnson said, "What we're trying to do is help hardworking Americans who are trying to provide for their families and make ends meet." Johnson said he has exchanged text messages with Musk since the former chief of department of govt efficiency (DOGE) came out against the GOP bill. Musk called it an "abomination" that would add to US debts and threaten economic stability. He urged voters to flood Capitol Hill with calls to vote against the measure, which is pending in the senate after clearing the House. His criticism sparked an angry social media back-and-forth with Trump. Johnson was dismissive of Musk's threats to finance opponents - even Democrats - of Republican members who back the bill. "We've got almost no calls to the offices... And I think that indicates people are taking a wait and see attitude. Some who may be convinced by some of his arguments, but rest understand: this is a very exciting piece of legislation."

Errol Musk Blames Elon's Trump Clash On PTSD, Predicts President's Win In Heated Spat
Errol Musk Blames Elon's Trump Clash On PTSD, Predicts President's Win In Heated Spat

NDTV

time3 hours ago

  • NDTV

Errol Musk Blames Elon's Trump Clash On PTSD, Predicts President's Win In Heated Spat

Elon Musk's father, Errol Musk, has claimed that his son lashed out at Donald Trump because of 'PTSD' from the White House and that he made a mistake going against the US president, who was the most likely to prevail in the nasty spat. Musk Sr made the remark in Moscow, where he is expected to address a forum organised by Vladimir Putin's closest aides. The tech billionaire has had a bitter, public fallout with the Republican leader after he lashed out about the recent 'Big, Beautiful Bill' brought in by the Trump administration. "So they had an argument about that [bill], and as they are all suffering from a bit of PTSD, a post-traumatic stress disorder over the last few months, they started hitting out at each other," said Mr Errol, as per M etro. "But unfortunately, he doesn't realise that in order to get their votes in the Senate and the Congress, Trump has to do that," he added. As per Musk Sr, the two heavyweights have been under stress for the last five months, and things reached a breaking point with the bill. "They are the only two people left in the arena, Trump and Elon, and all they were used to was fighting with the opposition. They've been under a lot of stress for five months. And it gives them a break. You know, they've had to get rid of all the opposition, try and put the country back on track, and do normal things and so forth," said Mr Errol. "They're very tired and stressed. And so you can expect something like this. It's not unusual. Trump will prevail. He's the president. He was elected as the president, so Elon made a mistake, I think. But he's tired. He's stressed." Musk-Trump fallout According to the Tesla CEO, the new bill would exacerbate the already substantial federal deficit, potentially plunging the country into a debt crisis. "I'm sorry, but I just can't stand it anymore. This massive, outrageous, pork-filled Congressional spending bill is a disgusting abomination. Shame on those who voted for it: you know you did wrong. You know it," the billionaire wrote on X (formerly Twitter) The situation turned pear-shaped when Mr Trump told reporters that he was expecting Mr Musk to attack him for some time. The SpaceX boss took things further by dropping the 'bomb' that Mr Trump was mentioned in the FBI's Jeffrey Epstein files. He, however, later deleted the post.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store