Musk says confident about Tesla achieving next production goal for Model 3

The chief executive says it’s “quite likely” that Tesla will build 5,000 of the sedans a week by the end of this month.

A 2018 Tesla Model 3 electric vehicle is shown in this photo illustration taken in Cardiff, California, U.S., June 1, 2018. Picture taken June 1, 2018.   REUTERS/Mike Blake
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Elon Musk expressed confidence about Tesla achieving the next production goal for its crucial Model 3, predicting that manufacturing will become a strength for the electric-car maker over time.

The chief executive said it’s “quite likely” that Tesla will build 5,000 of the sedans a week by the end of this month. The money-losing car maker has said its forecasts for profit and cash generation in the second half of this year — which Mr Musk reaffirmed during Tesla’s annual meeting Tuesday — are dependent on reaching this target.

“It’s very difficult to become a mass-manufacturing car company,” Mr Musk, 46, said after shareholders voted down a measure that would have required an independent director replace him as chairman. “No one has succeeded in doing this in a very long time in the United States.”

Manufacturing has befuddled Tesla ever since Mr Musk predicted 11 months ago that “production hell” would be ahead for the first car the company was trying to make in high volumes. Missed targets for the Model 3 contributed to the company burning through more than $1 billion in three of the last four quarters. An activist investor group cited failures to meet goals with the sedan as one of the reasons shareholders should have opposed re-electing three directors to the board, though that campaign failed.

One of the reasons for Mr Musk’s assurance that Tesla is turning the corner on manufacturing is the addition of a third general assembly line that completes the process of putting together the Model 3. The company started building the third line about two weeks ago, and the initial cars are moving through “crazy fast”, he said.

“The biggest constraint on output is general assembly,” Mr Musk said. “We can probably get to 5,000 a week with the current two general assembly lines. But with the third one, I’m highly confident that we can exceed 5,000 units per week.”

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Shares of the Palo Alto, California company rose as much as 1.7 per cent in late trading after Mr Musk commented on the likelihood that Tesla will meet the target. The stock had dropped 6.5 per cent this year through Tuesday's close.

Tesla is also now turning its attention toward expanding its manufacturing capacity by adding another plant, which will produce cars, battery packs and powertrains in Shanghai. The company may announce more details about that factory as soon as next month, Mr Musk said, then reveal plans for another to be built somewhere in Europe toward the end of 2018.

The comments by Mr Musk followed shareholders’ votes to reappoint three directors who were up for election during the meeting: private equity investor Antonio Gracias, Twenty-First Century Fox chief executive James Murdoch and food industry entrepreneur Kimbal Musk, Elon’s brother.

Investors also defeated a proposal to require that the chairman be an independent director, according to Todd Maron, Tesla’s general counsel, who said the company will release voting results in a regulatory filing within four business days.

The all-wheel drive version of the Model 3 will come out next month, Mr Musk said. The shorter-range battery version of the car that starts at $35,000 will start to arrive late this year, though the company may not reach volume production of that iteration until the first quarter of 2019.

Tesla then plans to unveil the Model Y crossover in March. That will go into production in the first half of 2020, along with the Semi truck and Roadster models, Mr Musk said.

Mr Musk still thinks manufacturing will become a strength for the company in the long term, though he acknowledged this was a counterintuitive prediction after Tesla’s trying experiences over the last year.

“It’s like, I will tell you, the most excruciating, hellish several months I’ve maybe ever had — and a lot of other people at Tesla,” Mr Musk said during the meeting, before inviting several of his top deputies to share the stage.

“But I think we’re getting there.”