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Where is the cheap electric vehicle and other questions investors want answered

Where is the cheap electric vehicle and other questions investors want answered

Tesla (TSLA) reports third-quarter results after the bell on Wednesday, with investors seeking clarity on the electric vehicle maker's long-awaited lower-cost electric vehicles, details on its robotaxi rollout and other initiatives such as AI and robotics.

Tesla shares have fallen about 9% since Tesla unveiled its robot taxi called Cybercab at its flashy “We, Robot” event on Oct. 10 at Warner Bros.'s studio lot in Burbank, California.

For the third quarter, Tesla is expected to report revenue of $25.42 billion, according to Bloomberg consensus. That's more than the $25.05 billion reported in the second quarter and also exceeds the $23.40 billion Tesla reported a year ago. According to Bloomberg, The Street expects Tesla to report adjusted earnings per share of $0.51, adjusted net income of $2.06 billion and operating income of $1.96 billion.

Earlier this month, Tesla (TSLA) announced third-quarter deliveries that fell slightly short of expectations, causing the stock to decline.

Tesla said it delivered 462,890 vehicles in the third quarter, up 6.4% from the previous quarter, marking the first quarter of delivery growth this year. The numbers were also higher than the 435,059 electric vehicles the company delivered in the same period last year. However, according to Bloomberg, Wall Street had expected Tesla to be closer to 463,897.

Many analysts and industry observers believe that the debut and release of a cheaper electric vehicle will push electric vehicle sales into the next round, as even CEO Elon Musk has said before. In their Q2 report, Tesla and Musk said the company remains on track to produce new vehicles, likely including a cheaper electric vehicle, in the first half of next year.

Investors and analysts wanted more details about Tesla's “We, Robot” event on the Cybercab itself and detailed test plans and questions about the development of Tesla's sub-$30,000 electric vehicle called the Model 2.

“Overall, we found Tesla’s robotaxi event to be underwhelming and surprisingly lacking in detail,” Bernstein analyst Toni Sacconaghi wrote the day after the event. “While Musk expressed his vision of an autonomous world, it offered little more than what he had repeatedly expressed in recent years.”

Sacconaghi complained that details on new product offerings such as the autonomous Cybercab and Robovan vans and timelines were missing. The analyst also believed that Tesla would find it difficult to overtake other robotaxi competitors such as Waymo and Cruise due to regulatory and technical reasons. Additionally, the lack of any detail or even a rendering of the Model 2 was also a disappointment.

A Tesla Cybercab robotaxi (Source: Tesla)
A Tesla Cybercab Robotaxi (Tesla) · Tesla

Tesla may show a representation of this cheaper electric vehicle in its third quarter shareholder presentation rather than actually showing it to investors and the public at an event (or announcing another launch event in the near future).

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