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Originally Posted by jvds
Okay. I strongly disagree with basically all of this but I do appreciate you sharing your viewpoint. Just for the record though, there are around 10k unsold model 3s floating around somewhere in addition to the 10k in transit.
It’s not my view. I was just offering an alternative story.
My real view of Tesla is that Musk is just treating the company as a vehicle to achieve his EV/green energy dream. No competent CEO would sacrifice soooo much of Model S/X production just to maximize model 3 volume.
I think this also explains why Tesla’s OCF has been toeing the line of almost exactly zero but somehow still slightly negative for most quarters in the last 5 years, even when the demand books was incontrovertibly larger than production capacity. Musk just wanted the cars on the road and didn’t care about cost until the cash burn got unbearable.
You saw signs of this lack of concern for costs with the guy reverse engineering cars for a living. Early Model 3s were built with no attention paid to cost. Just a few months later, the model 3s cut off a ton of inefficiencies. The culture at Tesla is volume first, then costs (as much as necessary), then quality. It’s Minimally Viable Product meets mass auto manufacturing.
I don’t think the model works long term. You can iterate software hundreds of times in a month with virtually no cost. Each iteration, basically every time Musk got another whim, costs Tesla millions of dollars. Tens of millions as production level ramps.
I actually do think Tesla has a viable business. The brand is synonymous with fast and modern electric vehicle. It has also shown it can sell at good gross margins (even without credits. Though the 35k base is meh for now Tesla in the past has cut costs over time.) I do want to invest in Tesla at some point. That point is some time after the board grows a pair and puts a leash and a muzzle on Elon Musk. Musk is useful as figurehead but the firm desperately needs a Tim Cook type now.