logo
Tesla starts production of more affordable model, reports steepest drop in quarterly revenue in over a decade

Tesla starts production of more affordable model, reports steepest drop in quarterly revenue in over a decade

CNA5 days ago
Tesla says it has started production of a more affordable model and expects volume production in the second half of the year.
The company reported the steepest decline in quarterly revenue in more than a decade, with a 12 per cent fall, as it battles strong competition from cheaper electric vehicles and a backlash against CEO Elon Musk's political views.
Revenue fell to $22.5 billion for the April-June quarter from $25.50 billion a year earlier. Analysts on average were expecting revenue of $22.74 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG.
The company reported a second straight quarterly revenue drop despite rolling out a much-awaited refreshed version of its best-selling Model Y SUV that investors had hoped would rekindle demand.
Much of the company's trillion dollar valuation hangs on its bet on its robotaxi service - a small trial of which was started in Austin, Texas, last month - and developing humanoid robots.
However, investors are worried about whether Musk will be able to give enough time and attention to Tesla after he locked horns with President Donald Trump by forming a new political party this month. He had promised weeks earlier that he would cut back on government work and focus on his companies.
A series of high-profile executive exits, including a longtime Elon Musk confidant who oversaw sales and manufacturing in North America and Europe and left Tesla last month, is also adding to the concerns.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

US senator wants Elon Musk to block use of Starlink by financial fraud groups in Southeast Asia, World News
US senator wants Elon Musk to block use of Starlink by financial fraud groups in Southeast Asia, World News

AsiaOne

time41 minutes ago

  • AsiaOne

US senator wants Elon Musk to block use of Starlink by financial fraud groups in Southeast Asia, World News

WASHINGTON — A Democratic senator on Monday (July 28) urged SpaceX CEO Elon Musk to block transnational criminal groups in Southeast Asia from using Starlink satellite internet service to commit fraud against Americans. Senator Maggie Hassan cited recent reports that Starlink is being used to facilitate fraud against Americans by a broad range of transnational criminal organisations operating "scam compounds" in Southeast Asia. The US Treasury Department's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network said these groups defrauded Americans out of billions of dollars, she added. "Scam networks in Myanmar, Thailand, Cambodia, and Laos, however, have apparently continued to use Starlink despite service rules permitting SpaceX to terminate access for fraudulent activity," Hassan wrote in a letter to Musk seen by Reuters. "SpaceX has a responsibility to block criminals from using the service to target Americans." SpaceX did not immediately respond to a request for comment. For years, criminal networks have trafficked hundreds of thousands of people to scam compounds across Southeast Asia, including many along the Thai-Myanmar border, where victims are forced to work in illegal online schemes, according to the United Nations. "While most people have probably noticed the increasing number of scam texts, calls, and emails they're receiving, they may not know that transnational criminals halfway across the world may be perpetrating these scams by using Starlink internet access," Hassan wrote. Since February, Thailand has halted electricity, internet, and fuel supplies to five Myanmar border areas, including Myawaddy, in a bid to disrupt the scam centres, which have become an escalating regional security concern. International pressure to shut down the scam centres intensified following the abduction of Chinese actor Wang Xing, who was kidnapped after arriving in Thailand in January. He was later rescued by Thai police, who located him across the border in Myanmar. Criminal networks, mainly emanating from China, are known to run several of these scam centres, including those in the Myawaddy region, according to the United States Institute of Peace. [[nid:720595]]

Barclays profit up 23% as Trump tariff turmoil lifts trading
Barclays profit up 23% as Trump tariff turmoil lifts trading

Business Times

time41 minutes ago

  • Business Times

Barclays profit up 23% as Trump tariff turmoil lifts trading

[LONDON] Barclays first-half profit rose by a better-than-expected 23 per cent, the British bank said on Tuesday (Jul 29), with its markets business reaping bumper returns from the frenzied trading activity sparked by US President Donald Trump's trade tariffs. Pretax profit for the January-June period totalled £5.2 billion (S$8.92 billion), above analysts' average forecast of £4.96 billion. The bank also announced a share buyback of £1 billion and a half year dividend of 3 pence per share, equating to £1.4 billion of total capital distributions to shareholders, up 21 per cent from the year before. The earnings update from the Britain and US-focused lender showed continued progress in its strategy to cut costs and prioritise spending on its domestic, retail and corporate focused unit above its investment bank. 'We remain on track to achieve the objectives of our three-year plan, delivering structurally higher and more stable returns for our investors,' CEO C S Venkatakrishnan said in the statement. The lender's investment bank nonetheless followed Wall Street peers in reporting a robust second quarter, as market turmoil led to increased trading activity in fixed income products and stocks in particular. Second-quarter income in the investment bank was £3.3 billion, better than the £3 billion forecast by analysts, thanks to strong gains in those trading businesses that offset a decline in fees from advising on deals. REUTERS

China social spending hits highest level in nearly two decades
China social spending hits highest level in nearly two decades

Straits Times

time2 hours ago

  • Straits Times

China social spending hits highest level in nearly two decades

China announced on July 28 that it will start offering nationwide cash handouts to families as an incentive for couples to have children. China's government spending has pivoted toward social welfare to a degree unseen for at least a generation, as it runs a record budget deficit with a focus on boosting consumption to cushion the blow from Donald Trump's tariffs . The latest evidence arrived on July 28, when China announced it will start offering nationwide cash handouts to families as an incentive for couples to have children. While Beijing is channeling less on-budget investment into infrastructure, expenditure that covers outlays ranging from education to employment and social security climbed to nearly 5.7 trillion yuan (S$1.02 trillion) in the first half – the highest for the period since the data series began in 2007. That represents an increase of 6.4 per cent from a year earlier, according to Bloomberg calculations based on figures published by the Ministry of Finance. Authorities could renew their pledge to prioritise support for domestic demand, as top officials prepare to meet this month to set the economic agenda for the rest of the year while trade talks with Washington continue. The splurge was almost double the increase in total spending under the general public budget, the first and biggest account among the government's four fiscal books. Infrastructure-related expenditure in the account – allocated for costs such as environmental protection, irrigation facilities and transportation – was 4.5 per cent less than a year earlier. Fiscal priorities have shifted after the trade war unleashed by Trump threatened China with millions of job losses and put pressure on its patchy social safety net. Under the new policy of childcare subsidies, the government will spend 3,600 yuan a year per kid under the age of three, according to the official Xinhua News Agency. Citigroup Inc. estimates a total lump-sum payout of 117 billion yuan in the second half of 2025, while Morgan Stanley puts the program's annual cost at 100 billion yuan, assuming about 9 million births a year. Although President Xi Jinping has in the past resisted large-scale handouts to families over what he's called 'welfarism', China responded in recent months by ramping up government support for households. The goal is partly to bolster domestic demand in the face of US tariffs, which have sent the country's shipments to the world's biggest consumer market slumping this year. 'Better supporting people's well-being will help boost domestic demand and is part of the rebalancing of the Chinese economy,' said Mr Tommy Xie, head of Asia macro research at Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. At the same time, China launched construction of a 1.2 trillion yuan mega-dam in Tibet in July, a massive project that will likely take years to complete. 'The room for infrastructure expansion in the future will shrink marginally' even though it can play a 'supporting role at critical times,' OCBC's Mr Xie said. Social security and employment saw the biggest gain in spending related to people's well-being, up almost 8 per cent in the first half from 2024. A survey carried out by China's central bank showed an employment sentiment index hit a record low in the second quarter, illustrating the need for more government aid for job seekers. Outlays on education increased 5.9 per cent and rose 4 per cent on medical treatment and health care. Meanwhile local governments' tapping of the annual quota of new bonds meant mainly for infrastructure investment slowed. Provinces have issued about 56 per cent of new special local bonds allowed for this year, down from an average of 61 per cent for January-July in the five years through 2024, according to Bloomberg calculations based on MOF numbers. Previously, the favored way to jumpstart growth was by spending on areas like roads, railways or industrial parks, much of it done by provincial governments. Instead, the government has accelerated the issuance of sovereign notes this year, primarily to cover the budget shortfall for routine public expenditure. Chinese provinces also sold substantial volumes of bonds in the first seven months to refinance their so-called hidden debt, as Beijing seeks to contain credit risks from deteriorating local finances. Government borrowing was crucial for replenishing state coffers depleted by China's years-long property slump. Revenue from real estate-related taxes, including deeds and urban land use, fell 5.6 per cent on year in the first half to 975.3 billion yuan. Provinces earned 1.43 trillion yuan in the period from selling land, a contraction of 6.5 per cent despite a rebound of over 20 per cent in June thanks to market recovery in some big cities. Economists at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. cautioned, however, on 'the sustainability of land sales revenue improvement' and maintained their forecast that government land sales revenue may decline further this year by up to 10 per cent. Total tax revenue shrank 1.2 per cent on year in the first half to 9.29 trillion yuan, with income from levies on such transactions as vehicle purchases posting double-digit declines. Non-tax revenue – which includes compensation for the use of state-controlled resources and assets and fines – rose 3.7 per cent to 2.27 trillion yuan. It grew despite a decline in the money collected from fines, a Finance Ministry official said at a Friday briefing. Revenue from the tax on vehicle purchases plunged 19.1 per cent in January-June from 2024, the biggest drop among all categories and more than triple its decline in the same period of 2024. Slumping income from the vehicle purchase tax shows the impact of the government's decision to extend the suspension of a levy on buying new energy vehicles, such as electric cars, to 2027, Huachuang Securities analysts including Zhang Yu wrote in a note on July 25. The shift away from fuel-powered cars also weighed on revenue from the consumption tax by reducing demand for gasoline and diesel, they said. The government is losing a total of 265 billion yuan per year in revenues from the vehicle purchase tax and the consumption levy due to the pivot to cars powered by alternative-energy sources, Huachuang Securities estimates. 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