ReportWire

Tag: Autos

  • Elon Musk subpoena in Epstein-JPMorgan lawsuit can be served to Tesla, judge rules

    Elon Musk subpoena in Epstein-JPMorgan lawsuit can be served to Tesla, judge rules

    Ghislaine Maxwell and Elon Musk attend the 2014 Vanity Fair Oscar Party Hosted By Graydon Carter on March 2, 2014 in West Hollywood, California.

    Kevin Mazur | vf14 | Wireimage | Getty Images

    A federal judge ruled Wednesday that the U.S. Virgin Islands can serve a subpoena for Elon Musk to his electric car company Tesla, as part of the government’s lawsuit against JPMorgan Chase over the bank’s ties to dead sexual trafficker Jeffrey Epstein.

    The ruling came days after lawyers for the USVI government told Judge Jed Rakoff they had been unable to serve the Tesla CEO personally with the subpoena demanding documents related to Epstein and JPMorgan.

    The Virgin Islands is suing JPMorgan in U.S. District Court in Manhattan for allegedly enabling and financially benefiting from Epstein’s sex trafficking of young women. The late financier and sex criminal had been a customer of the bank from 1998 through 2013. JPMorgan denies any wrongdoing.

    On April 28, the USVI issued a subpoena to Musk because of suspicion that Epstein “may have referred or attempted to refer” Musk as a client to JPMorgan, according to a court filing Monday.

    That subpoena demands that Musk turn over any documents showing communication involving him, JPMorgan and Epstein, as well as “all Documents reflecting or regarding Epstein’s involvement in human trafficking and/or his procurement of girls or women for consensual sex.”

    CNBC Politics

    Read more of CNBC’s politics coverage:

    The USVI said in a court filing Monday that an investigative firm it had retained had been unable to locate Musk to serve him in person with the subpoena, as is the norm.

    The filing also said that a lawyer for Musk did not reply to a request that the attorney accept the subpoena for his client.

    Rakoff, in his order Wednesday, authorized the USVI to “arrange alternative service of its Subpoena to Produce Documents by serving Elon Musk via service upon Tesla Inc.’s registered agent.”

    Musk didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

    The USVI also has issued similar subpoenas for documents related to Epstein and JPMorgan to Google co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin, former Disney executive Michael Ovitz, Hyatt Hotels executive chairman Thomas Pritzker and Mort Zuckerman, the billionaire real estate investor.

    JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon is scheduled to be deposed on May 26 for the lawsuit and for a related suit against the bank by a woman who says Epstein sexually abused her.

    Muks in a tweet Monday night had blasted the idea of that he be given a subpoena in the case.

    “This is idiotic on so many levels,” Musk wrote on Twitter, which he bought and took private last year.

    “That cretin never advised me on anything whatsoever,” he wrote, referring to Epstein.

    “The notion that I would need or listen to financial advice from a dumb crook is absurd,” Musk added. “JPM let Tesla down ten years ago, despite having Tesla’s global commercial banking business, which we then withdrew. I have never forgiven them.”

    In 2018, Epstein told The New York Times he had been advising Musk after the Securities and Exchange Commission opened a probe into Musk’s comments about taking Tesla private. A Tesla spokesperson told The Times, “It is incorrect to say that Epstein ever advised Elon on anything.”

    Epstein killed himself in August 2019, a month after federal authorities arrested him on an indictment charging him with child sex trafficking. He had previously pleaded guilty in 2008 to a Florida state charge of soliciting sex from an underage girl.

    Before his fall from grace, Epstein and his former girlfriend Ghislaine Maxwell, socialized with many rich and powerful people, among them former presidents Donald Trump and Bill Clinton, as well as Britain’s Prince Andrew, the brother of King Charles III.

    Maxwell, a British socialite, was convicted in late 2021 in federal court in Manhattan of procuring underage girls to be sexually abused by Epstein. Maxwell was sentenced in June 2022 to 20 years in prison.

    Musk in July 2020 replied to a Twitter post that showed him posing for a photo next to a smiling Maxwell.

    “Don’t know Ghislaine at all,” Musk wrote. “She photobombed me once at a Vanity Fair party several years ago. Real question is why VF invited her in the first place.”

    The New York Times, in a 2022 article detailing that photo, reported that a Vanity Fair staff member who had stood next to both Maxwell and Musk at the party said that “the pair chatted.”

    “Ms. Maxwell asked Mr. Musk if there were a way to remove oneself from the internet and encouraged Mr. Musk to destroy the internet; Mr. Musk demurred,” The Times reported, citing the staffer, who shared contemporaneous notes of the encounter.

    “Ms. Maxwell then asked Mr. Musk why aliens hadn’t yet made contact with humanity, to which Mr. Musk replied that all civilizations eventually end — including Maxwell’s hypothetical alien one — and raised the possibility that humans are living in a simulation.”

    Source link

  • Tesla Stock Rises After Annual Meeting. Here’s Why.

    Tesla Stock Rises After Annual Meeting. Here’s Why.


    • Order Reprints

    • Print Article


    Source link

  • Stellantis warns UK risks exodus of EV production under post-Brexit rules

    Stellantis warns UK risks exodus of EV production under post-Brexit rules

    Generic stock pictures of the Astra assembly line at Vauxhall’s plant in Ellesmere Port, Cheshire. Picture date: Tuesday July 6, 2021.

    Peter Byrne – Pa Images | Pa Images | Getty Images

    LONDON — Executives from Stellantis, the automaking giant behind brands including Peugeot, Chrysler and Citroën, are meeting with U.K. ministers Wednesday to warn post-Brexit trading arrangements severely risk its operations in the country.

    Stellantis manufactures Vauxhall, Fiat, Opel and other vehicles across two plants in the U.K., employing more than 5,000 people. It plans to move both toward majority and then 100% EV production as it rolls out electrification across its brands.

    related investing news

    CNBC Pro

    In a submission to a government enquiry into vehicle battery production, the company said it would be at a competitive disadvantage going forward because of tariffs due to be imposed on batteries transported between the U.K. and mainland Europe.

    “If the cost of EV manufacturing in the U.K. becomes uncompetitive and unsustainable, operations will close,” it said, citing previous decisions by BMW Group to relocate electric Mini production to China, and investments by Honda in EV production in the U.S. following the closure of its U.K. site.

    The EU–U.K. Trade and Cooperation Agreement gave battery and EVs a grace period before full Rules of Origin tariffs kick in, responding to these sourcing challenges. However, they will become progressively stricter in the coming years, rising to 45% and then 65% in terms of required domestic production. Automakers otherwise face 10% export duties on EVs.

    Stellantis said that if it manufactures its batteries in China and mainland Europe in the coming years as currently planned, it would face “higher logistics costs” that would threaten the “sustainability of our U.K. manufacturing operations.”

    The company warned the U.K. does not have a sufficient supply of the materials needed to support vehicle battery production. While this is also an issue in mainland Europe, with many supplies coming from China, Stellantis noted it had made significant investments in gigafactories in France, Germany and Italy and had a battery joint venture there.

    Watch CNBC's full interview with UK Finance Minister Jeremy Hunt

    It wants the government to negotiate with EU officials to maintain current rules until 2027.

    It comes as the EU and its members ramp up focus on EV production, with the formation of the European Battery Alliance and plans to loosen state aid rules around green manufacturing, in part in response to the U.S.’s landmark Inflation Reduction Act.

    Earlier this week, French President Emmanuel Macron hosted Tesla CEO Elon Musk to try to court investment in the country.

    The U.K. has made some progress on EV and battery production, with a large-scale lithium refinery planned for the north of England and Nissan building a battery gigafactory alongside a Chinese partner; but also instability, with battery maker Britishvolt narrowly rescued from administration earlier this year.

    The committee hearing is its attempt to lay the path for the future of EV production in the country, alongside an Automotive Transformation Fund.

    “We’ve been sleeping at the wheel when it comes to bringing battery plants to the United Kingdom,” Andy Palmer, former COO of Nissan and chair of EV battery manufacturer Inobat, told the BBC Wednesday.

    I've never seen this kind of EV investment, says DC Strategic Advisors president

    Mike Hawes, chief executive of the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders, said the rules of origin for batteries posed a “significant challenge to manufacturers on both sides of the Channel, with the prospect of tariffs and price increases which discourage consumers from buying the very vehicles needed to achieve climate change goals.”

    Matthias Heck, senior credit officer at Moody’s Investors Service, told CNBC many companies are seeking to establish EV battery manufacturing facilities near their automotive plants due to the complexity of auto industry supply chains, with many parts crossing international borders, sometimes several times.

    This includes the likes of Stellantis in a joint venture with Mercedes-Benz and Total, Volkswagen and Tesla, Heck said. Meanwhile EU projects are benfiting from subsidies and local government support, as well as proximity to plants in France and Germany.

    “In countries where this is not possible, automakers rely on battery imports at competitive prices and logistics cost. Otherwise, they might be unable to produce battery electric vehicles at costs which are competitive to imports from other countries.”

    Source link

  • Elon Musk talks Tesla, Twitter, and why he tweets freely — even if it costs him money

    Elon Musk talks Tesla, Twitter, and why he tweets freely — even if it costs him money

    Tesla CEO Elon Musk sat down for a sprawling interview with CNBC anchor David Faber on Tuesday following Tesla’s 2023 annual shareholder meeting in Austin, Texas.

    During the course of their approximately hour long conversation, Musk reflected on:

    • How he has managed a takeover of Twitter so far and what lies ahead. Among other things, he said Twitter’s Community Notes feature has cost Twitter $40 million in business when two big clients reduced spending after their ads received community notes accusing them of false advertising. He also claimed that when the acquisition closed, Twitter had negative $3 billion in annual cash flow and $1 billion in the bank. “The analogy I was using was like being teleported into a plane that’s in a nosedive headed to the ground with the engines on fire and the controls don’t work….”
    • He also defended his own tweets that were widely criticized as lending credence to conspiracies about George Soros and a recent mass shooting event in Allen, Texas, insisting “I’ll say what I want, and if the consequence of that is losing money, so be it.”
    • His personal views and habits when it comes to work and productivity. He said he takes only two or three days off per year, works seven days a week and gets six hours of sleep a night. He also said he believes it’s morally wrong for people in the “laptop class” to advocate for working from home when service workers, such as people who work in factories, still have to show up in person.
    Tesla CEO Elon Musk: 'The laptop class is living in la-la land' over work-from-home
    • Tesla’s ability to weather rocky economic cycles. Musk said that the next 12 months will be difficult for Tesla from a macroeconomic perspective because of increased interest rates pinching consumer budgets. But he also said Tesla could take advantage of Tesla’s “real-time information on demand” for its cars to adjust pricing effectively.
    • He believes the Fed is going to be too slow to lower interest rates when the economy slows, and that will hurt consumer demand. “You can think of raising the Fed rate as somewhat of a brake pedal on the economy, frankly,” Musk said. “It makes a lot of things more expensive. So if the car payment or your home mortgage is absorbing more of your monthly budget then you have less money to buy other things.”
    Tesla CEO Elon Musk: Fed operating with too much 'latency' on rate hike decisions
    • What would happen to the global economy if China makes a move to control Taiwan. “The Chinese economy and the rest of the global economy are like conjoined twins. It would be like trying to separate conjoined twins. That’s the severity of the situation. And it’s actually worse for a lot of other companies than it is for Tesla. I mean, I’m not sure where you’re going to get an iPhone, for example.”
    Tesla CEO Elon Musk on U.S.-China tensions: There is some 'inevitability' to Taiwan situation
    • His involvement in the early days of ChatGPT-developer OpenAI, saying that it exists only because he wanted a non-commercial alternative to Google’s growing dominance in AI. He expressed disappointment that the company has abandoned its non-profit roots. And he said he is no longer friends with Google co-founder Larry Page. “The final straw was Larry calling me a ‘species-ist’ for being pro-human consciousness instead of machine consciousness.”
    Elon Musk on Sam Altman and ChatGPT: I am the reason OpenAI exists
    • His political views, including his belief that Joe Biden won the 2020 election and it wasn’t stolen, but that he thinks there was at least some voting fraud. He also said he voted for Biden but hinted he wasn’t happy with his choice, saying “I wish we could have just a normal human being as president.”
    Elon Musk on 2024 election: We want a good CEO of America

    Source link

  • Tesla 2023 shareholder meeting: Musk says Tesla will deliver production Cybertrucks this year

    Tesla 2023 shareholder meeting: Musk says Tesla will deliver production Cybertrucks this year

    In an aerial view, Tesla Corporate Headquarters are seen on January 03, 2023 in Travis County, Texas.

    Brandon Bell | Getty Images

    Tesla CEO Elon Musk addressed shareholders at the company’s annual meeting on Tuesday, predicting the economy would pick up after 12 months and promising the company would deliver production Cybertrucks later this year.

    Addressing the long delays to the angular electric pickup, Musk lamented some of the manufacturing challenges and said, “Sorry for the delay. We’re finally going to start delivering production Cybertrucks later this year.” He said Cybertruck would be the vehicle he drives on a daily basis.

    Musk also said that he expects a challenging economic environment to persist for the next twelve months, and that many companies will go bankrupt. But after that, he believes, the economy will recover and Tesla will be well-positioned.

    He also predicted that the Tesla Model Y would be “the number one best-selling car on Earth this year.”

    During the Q&A session, an attendee dressed like a robot with a cowboy hat, asked Musk if Tesla would build an RV or a camper. Musk said the company doesn’t plan to build an RV at this time, but that the forthcoming Cybertruck could be converted into an RV or a camper.

    Responding to a question about his $44 billion takeover of social media service Twitter, Musk said it was a “short-term distraction” and said he had to do some “major open-heart surgery” to ensure its survival, then noted that he was excited to have former NBC Universal advertising executive Linda Yaccarino joining the company to become its new CEO.

    Another attendee asked Musk if he would reconsider Tesla’s longstanding stance on traditional advertising. Historically, the company has relied on word of mouth, influencer marketing and other non-traditional marketing and advertising to get the word out about its products and their best attributes.

    Musk said on Tuesday, “We’ll try out a little advertising and see how it goes.”

    Straubel added to board, new drive train touted

    Earlier, shareholders voted to add former Tesla CTO JB Straubel, who is now the CEO of Redwood Materials, to the automaker’s board of directors. Redwood Materials recycles electronic waste and batteries, and last year struck a multi-billion dollar deal with Tesla supplier Panasonic.

    After the shareholder vote, CEO Elon Musk kicked off his portion of the meeting with a commitment to conduct a third-party audit of Tesla’s cobalt supply chain, namely to ensure there is no child labor within any of Tesla’s cobalt suppliers.

    Cobalt is a critical ingredient for production of batteries that go into Tesla’s electric cars and backup battery packs used at homes and for utility-scale energy projects. “Even for the small amount of cobalt that we do us, we will make sure six weeks til Sunday that no child labor is being exploited,” Musk said to the cheers of investors in attendance in person.

    Musk also announced that Tesla plans to produce a new kind of drive unit, which he said will require less silicon carbide than prior drive trains, and no rare earth elements. He added that Tesla will also switch to a new, low voltage architecture in its cars which should require less copper.

    Later in his presentation, Musk boasted about the company’s energy storage business and said growth in the sales of “big batteries” was faster than growth in the company’s core automotive segment.

    Distraction concerns

    Since the electric vehicle maker’s last annual meeting in August 2022, Tesla’s largest retail shareholder, Leo Koguan, has criticized Musk for selling billions of dollars worth of his Tesla holdings to finance a $44 billion buyout of Twitter, the social media company.

    Koguan, who is a billionaire and founder of the IT services firm SHI International, called for the company’s board to “perform shock therapy to resuscitate stock price,” namely by way of a share buyback late last year.

    Some institutional Tesla investors have admonished Musk for being too distracted with his new role as Twitter CEO to perform optimally at the helm of Tesla, but Musk said on Tuesday that he expected to spend less time on Twitter going forward than he has in the last six months. They have also criticized the Tesla board, led by chairwoman Robyn Denholm, for failing to rein him in and protect shareholders’ interests.

    Shares in Tesla closed at $228.52 on October 28, 2022, after Musk officially took over Twitter. They closed at $166.52 on May 16, 2023, as the meeting kicked off, and rose about 0.5% after hours.

    At last year’s shareholders meeting, Musk predicted an 18-month recession, teased the possibility of share buybacks, and told investors that electric vehicle business was aiming to produce 20 million vehicles annually by 2030, which he thought would require a dozen factories total with each one producing 1.5 million to 2 million units per year.

    This is a developing story, please check back for updates.

    Disclosure: NBCUniversal is the parent company of CNBC.

    Source link

  • Americans are keeping their cars longer amid sky-high prices, rising interest rates

    Americans are keeping their cars longer amid sky-high prices, rising interest rates

    Cars, trucks, SUVs, and other vehicles drive in traffic on the 405 freeway through the Sepulveda Pass in Los Angeles, California, on August 25, 2022.

    Patrick T. Fallon | AFP | Getty Images

    DETROIT — The average age of passenger vehicles on U.S. roadways climbed to a record this year, as car owners hold on to their vehicles longer amid low supplies of new vehicles and sky-high prices.

    The average age of a light-duty vehicle on U.S. roads rose by more than three months — the highest year-over-year increase since the Great Recession in 2008-2009 — to 12.5 years as of Jan. 1, according to a new report Monday from S&P Global Mobility. That includes a 3.8% increase for passenger cars to 13.6 years and a 1.7% uptick in trucks, SUVs and crossovers to 11.8 years.

    Rising vehicle ages are good news for aftermarket parts suppliers like AutoZone, O’Reilly Automotive and Advance Auto Parts. It also can benefit dealer service centers, but it doesn’t bode well for new vehicle dealers and sales.

    “The aftermarket and the repair market as a whole is definitely a winner as the average age continues to grow,” said Todd Campau, associate director of aftermarket solutions for S&P Global Mobility. “The more older vehicles that are on the road, the more repairs they need.”

    In total, S&P Global Mobility reports there are more than 284 million vehicles in operation on U.S. roads. That’s up slightly from 283 million last year.

    S&P reports the average vehicle age last year experienced upward pressure initially due to supply constraints that caused low levels of new vehicle inventory, and then by slowing demand as rising interest rates and inflation reduced consumer demand in the second half of the year.

    New and used vehicle prices have been elevated since the start of the coronavirus pandemic, as the global health crisis combined with supply chain issues caused production of new vehicles to sporadically idle. The costs and scarcity of inventory led consumers to buy more used vehicles, increasing those prices as well.

    In addition, the Federal Reserve’s moves to raise interest rates 10 times since March 2022 have not assisted new vehicle sales.

    Cox Automotive reports the average listed price of a used vehicle was $26,799 in April — the highest price point this year. The average transaction price for a new vehicle was $48,275 in April, up 3.7%, or $1,744, from a year earlier.

    Trucks dominate

    Part of the pricing increase is due to the vehicle mix, swinging away from passenger cars to utility vehicles.

    The number of passenger cars on the road will fall below 100 million for the first time since 1978, according to S&P, as U.S. consumers demand larger vehicles that automakers are happily building at higher profit margins.

    “Pickup trucks have stayed healthy. … They’ve stayed pretty consistent,” Campau said. “The real driver here is the crossover utility vehicle that really has displaced the passenger car for most families.”

    In 2022, S&P reports 78% of all new vehicles registered in the U.S. last year were crossovers, trucks or SUVs.

    EVs increasing

    Source link

  • Rivian’s Earnings Fell Short. The Stock Is Rising.

    Rivian’s Earnings Fell Short. The Stock Is Rising.

    Rivian’s Earnings Fell Short. The Stock Is Rising.

    Source link

  • Threats to the billion dollar parking industry

    Threats to the billion dollar parking industry

    Share

    While historically family-owned, the parking industry is today largely dominated by two players: SP Plus (SP+) and ABM. But the industry is facing some challenges. Aside from the rise of e-commerce and ride-hailing, a post pandemic world where workers are rarely driving into urban areas is forcing the industry to pivot and expand its services, as well as heavily invest in technology. It remains to be seen if those strategic decisions will pay off.

    13:20

    Sat, May 6 20238:00 AM EDT

    Source link

  • Chegg, Arista, Uber, Pfizer, DuPont, and More Stock Market Movers

    Chegg, Arista, Uber, Pfizer, DuPont, and More Stock Market Movers


    • Order Reprints
    • Print Article

    [ad_2]
    Source link

  • Should You Sell Tesla Stock In May? Maybe Not.

    Should You Sell Tesla Stock In May? Maybe Not.



    Tesla


    shares have been on a wild ride lately as investors debate profit margins, price cuts and EV demand. Predicting what’s next is no easy task given all that, plus rising interest rates and persistent inflation. Stock charts and stock seasonality can help investors get a sense of whether or not they should just sell in May and come back and revisit shares later in the year.

    Source link

  • California bans the sale of new diesel trucks by 2036

    California bans the sale of new diesel trucks by 2036

    Cars, trucks, SUVs, and other vehicles drive in traffic on the 405 freeway through the Sepulveda Pass in Los Angeles, California, on August 25, 2022.

    Patrick T. Fallon | AFP | Getty Images

    California regulators on Friday voted to ban the sale of new diesel big rigs by 2036 and require all trucks to be zero-emissions by 2042, a decision that puts the state at the forefront of mitigating national tailpipe pollution.

    The California Air Resources Board unanimously approved the Advanced Clean Fleets rule, the state’s second zero-emissions trucks rule and first in the world to require new commercial trucks, including garbage trucks, delivery trucks and other medium and heavy-duty vehicles, to be electric.

    Supporters of the rule say it will improve public health in marginalized communities that have endured polluted air while mitigating the effects of climate change. The mandate is estimated to deliver $26.5 billion in public health benefits in California in avoided health impacts and deaths due to diesel pollution. 

    Heavy-duty trucks represent nearly one third of the state’s nitrogen oxide and more than one quarter of its fine particle pollution from diesel fuel, according to the California Air Resources Board While medium and heavy-duty trucks are just 10% of the vehicles on the country’s roads, they emit 25% of the greenhouse gas emissions from transportation, according to the Union of Concerned Scientists, a nonprofit. 

    “Frontline communities across California who breathe in deadly diesel pollution every day can finally get some relief with the Advanced Clean Fleets rule,” said Andrea Vidaurre, senior policy analyst for the People’s Collective for Environmental Justice. “There is no acceptable level of exposure to deadly diesel pollution — so it has got to go, for the sake of our health and our lungs.”

    Some of the country’s major truck manufacturers and their lobbying groups have strongly opposed the regulations, arguing that requirements are costly as electric models are more expensive than diesel trucks. Large trucks are more expensive to convert to electric models than smaller vehicles due to their size and weight.

    The trucking industry has also said that the deadlines are unrealistic given the lack of EV charging infrastructure and available space at ports.

    The mandate would require companies that operate 50 or more trucks to convert their fleets into electric or hydrogen models and achieve zero-emissions by 2042.

    The earliest deadline is for drayage trucks, which carry cargo to and from major ports, which must be converted to electric models by 2035, while new sales starting in 2024 must be zero-emissions. Vehicles like garbage trucks and school buses must be zero-emissions by 2027.

    California had sought waivers from the Clean Air Act to set stricter standards than the federal government for heavy-duty vehicles. The state’s stricter tailpipe emissions rules will have broader effects beyond California — which has significant authority over the U.S. auto industry — and could pave the way for other states to follow suit.

    For instance, New York, New Jersey, Washington, Oregon, Massachusetts, Vermont, and Colorado have already adopted the California’s Advanced Clean Trucks rule.

    The state has committed to achieving 100% renewable energy by 2045. Last year, it banned the sale of new gasoline-powered cars starting in 2035. Today’s mandate also comes a day after the state adopted a historic rule to limit emissions from diesel-powered trains.

    Source link

  • Chicago business activity index less negative in April

    Chicago business activity index less negative in April

    The Chicago Business Barometer, also known as the Chicago PMI, rose 4.8 index points to 48.6 in April.

    Economists polled by the Wall Street Journal forecast a decline to a 43.8 reading. 

    This is the eighth straight reading below the 50 threshold that indicates contraction territory.

    The index is produced by the ISM-Chicago with MNI. It is released to subscribers three minutes before its release to the public at 9:45 am Eastern. It is the last of the regional manufacturing indices before the national ISM data for April is released on Monday.

    So far, the regional data suggest a modest improvement this month in the manufacturing ISM. In March, the ISM factory index fell to 46.3% from 47.7% in the prior month. It was the fourth month in contraction territory.

    Source link

  • Mobileye Shocks With Lower Guidance. Blame Tesla.

    Mobileye Shocks With Lower Guidance. Blame Tesla.

    Self-driving-technology company


    Mobileye Global


    reported a disappointing quarter, and cut full-year financial guidance. The electric-vehicle price war, being led by


    Tesla


    is the main reason.



    Mobileye


    stock (ticker: MBLY) is down significantly in Thursday trading, falling more than 23%. The


    S&P 500


    and


    Nasdaq Composite


    are up about 0.6% and 0.9%, respectively.

    Source link

  • China’s EV players are starting to compete on driver assist tech

    China’s EV players are starting to compete on driver assist tech

    Huawei’s co-developed Aito electric car brand is now selling an updated version of the M5 model that comes with new driver-assist tech.

    Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    BEIJING — Companies in China are playing up assisted driving technology as a way to compete in the hot electric car market.

    Around the Shanghai auto show that kicked off last week, electric car startups and Chinese tech companies alike made several announcements about their driver-assist tech.

    It’s not clear how powerful any of the announced features are — and whether Chinese consumers want to buy them. Current regulation also limits how much companies can allow tech to control driving.

    But McKinsey estimates assisted and fully autonomous driving systems in passenger cars could generate $300 billion to $400 billion in global revenue by 2035. China is the world’s largest car market.

    Among the recent announcements, Huawei said it would upgrade its driver assistance system for changing lanes on highways and parking — and expand support for city driving. The company said its new product, called “Huawei ADS 2.0” costs 36,000 yuan ($5,218) on a one-time basis or 7,200 yuan annually.

    The tech is slated for initial release on an upgraded Aito M5 — set to begin deliveries in June — with future rollout to the Avatr 11 and Arcfox Alpha S. All three electric vehicles come from brands that already incorporate Huawei’s technology.

    Li Auto announced plans to roll out driver-assist tech to customers in 100 cities in China by the end of the year — a feature the company claimed would be “free for life.” That’s according to a CNBC translation of the Chinese.

    Those and other announcements follow Xpeng’s rollout in the last few weeks of driver-assist technology to some users Shanghai. The tech claims to require drivers to do little more than keeping their hands on the wheel, while the vehicle travels to a destination in the city on its own, including stopping at traffic lights. Xpeng’s tech was previously only available in Shenzhen and Guangzhou.

    Such urban scenarios are becoming an area of differentiation in China.

    We recognize that, as a startup, the only path to possibly achieving autonomous driving is to follow Tesla’s path.

    Maxwell Zhou

    DeepRoute.ai, CEO

    Tesla doesn’t offer its driver-assist tech in Chinese cities — a feature marketed overseas as “Full Self Driving.” Only the company’s Autopilot for assisting with driving on highways is available in China.

    “If you don’t offer [assisted driving tech] by next year then it’s going to be really impossible to compete,” Maxwell Zhou, CEO of autonomous driving software startup DeepRoute.ai, told a few reporters last week in Mandarin. That’s according to a CNBC translation.

    The company’s latest driver-assist software — used together with cameras and other hardware — is set to reach consumers this year, through passenger cars from “an established automotive brand,” the four-year-old startup announced in late March, without sharing a name.

    The maps debate

    One of DeepRoute’s selling points is doing away with “high-definition maps.” That allows a vehicle to use driver assist tech on roads where those technical parameters haven’t been created.

    It’s a trend car brands such as Xpeng and Huawei are pursuing — and Tesla’s strategy for developing autonomous driving.

    Elon Musk’s car company has focused on using cameras and artificial intelligence to steer the vehicle, without heavy reliance on HD maps.

    Those maps, used by autonomous driving companies such as Alphabet‘s Waymo, give a car a detailed picture of city streets. But they need to be created before a car runs on the road.

    That process can drive up costs. DeepRoute’s Zhou estimated each car for gathering data would require $100,000, and an additional $30,000 a year to operate — for a total of about $2 billion or $3 billion, not including the cost of human labor.

    “We recognize that, as a startup, the only path to possibly achieving autonomous driving is to follow Tesla’s path,” Zhou said.

    “Because as a startup, there’s no way we could spend several billions of U.S. dollars just to buy cars, buy data. Waymo can do that,” he said. Zhou added that since China keeps fixing its roads, it would be difficult to constantly supply cars with accurate enough maps.

    Too advanced for consumers?

    Despite overall growth in new energy vehicle sales, it remains unclear whether Chinese consumers care enough about driver-assist tech when most of them haven’t used it yet. The market this year has focused on price cuts to attract buyers.

    Xpeng, considered one of the most advanced technologically, saw deliveries plunge in the first quarter ahead of a more widespread rollout of its assisted driving tech. Industry giant BYD has downplayed self-driving tech.

    Nio CEO William Li told CNBC that driver-assist technology ranks relatively low among users’ needs. But he said that people tend to rely on it once they try it — which will help drive relatively fast adoption.

    Still, DeepRoute’s Zhou noted the discussion in China is currently dominated by car companies and trade publications, not consumers.

    Read more about electric vehicles from CNBC Pro

    Most cars with advanced driver-assist tech only operate on highways, while the few that can run on city streets are more expensive, said Zhang Xin, executive editor-in-chief of AutoR, an industry publication with more than 110,000 followers on the Twitter-like Weibo platform.

    Consumers who simply buy the most advanced technology may find they don’t end up using it, he said. Zhang added that map-free driver-assist systems are not yet powerful enough to completely do away with maps.

    Money in components

    Part of car companies’ wider interest in driver-assist tech comes from lower costs.

    Shanghai-based Hesai makes the light detection and ranging (LiDAR) units often used for driver-assist systems. CEO David Li said just a few years ago, those units were priced around $10,000, making them “virtually impossible to be used for passenger cars.”

    Now lidar units cost a couple hundred dollars, he said, noting expectations for hundreds of thousands of lidar unit sales this year.

    “We see great momentum this year already,” Li told CNBC last week.

    Hesai shipped more than 40,000 lidar units in the fourth quarter, up from 87 in the year-ago period, according to the company. Quarterly net revenue grew by nearly 57% year-on-year to 409.2 million yuan, while loss from operations increased by 65% to 140.1 million yuan.

    The company’s customers include Li Auto and manufacturers in the U.S. and Germany. This year, Hesai announced deals with Didi-backed autonomous truck company KargoBot and Seres, which manufactures cars for Huawei, among others.

    Source link

  • Elon Musk had a rough week across his empire — Tesla, Twitter and SpaceX

    Elon Musk had a rough week across his empire — Tesla, Twitter and SpaceX

    Theo Wargo | Wireimage | Getty Images

    A rough week for Elon Musk was capped Friday when institutional shareholders in Tesla admonished the company’s board of directors to rein in an “over-committed” CEO in an open letter.

    The letter follows the midair explosion of the SpaceX Starship rocket in its first test flight Thursday and a first-quarter Tesla earnings report Wednesday that saw net income decrease more than 20% from the prior year on narrowing margins. The report sent Tesla shares down almost 10% Thursday and erased nearly $13 billion from Musk’s net worth, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires’ Index.

    Musk also waded into controversy with Twitter again, eliminating verified status from the accounts of most nonpaying subscribers and eliminating markings for government officials and accounts, raising the specter of impostors running rampant on the platform.

    What the letter says

    The Tesla investors, who say their holdings amount to more than $1.5 billion, want the board to bring in more independent members and work harder to solve issues at the company that can pose “substantial legal, operational, and reputational risks” to the electric vehicle maker, “jeopardizing its long-term value.”

    The investors are particularly concerned with Musk and Tesla’s handling of human rights and workers’ rights. Their letter recounts many lawsuits in which Tesla has been sued over racial discrimination, union-busting, wage theft, sexual harassment and unsafe working conditions.

    “Tesla appears to be embracing a broader culture of being ‘above the law,'” they wrote, adding that Tesla now faces criminal probes by the U.S. Department of Justice, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and California’s Department of Motor Vehicles over its Autopilot technology and claims about self-driving.

    “Instead of working to address problems with regulators, CEO Musk has made derogatory tweets and comments, fueling tensions,” they wrote.

    The open letter to Tesla’s board comes after Tesla shares have declined more than 15% over the past month.

    Nia Impact Capital’s Kristin Hull told CNBC the letter is meant as a “call to action” and she is hoping that Tesla Chair Robyn Denholm will take the time to write a meaningful reply, at a minimum. “We want to see the board take their job seriously — we don’t see them doing a good job at being Elon Musk’s boss.”

    Eroding margins, exploding rockets

    While shares of Tesla were ticking higher in early trading Friday, the company’s first-quarter earnings update this week revealed ballooning inventory levels and eroding profit margins.

    According to the company’s investor presentation for the first three months of 2023, Tesla owes vendors $7.32 billion, and holds $14.38 billion in inventory after ramping up production in its factories and implementing price cuts through the first quarter.

    While Tesla raised prices on Model S and X vehicles in some markets Friday, those models represent a minor slice of overall sales and production for Tesla today. The modest price hikes were also accompanied by an incentive — three years of free Supercharging on the company’s electric vehicle charging network.

    Tesla’s stock price slide has a direct effect on Musk, whose personal wealth is mostly derived from his Tesla holdings, as he lost approximately $13 billion of his on-paper net worth the day after Tesla’s first-quarter earnings.

    Also on Thursday, Musk’s U.S. defense contractor, SpaceX, launched its Starship Super Heavy vehicle in an orbital test flight from its Boca Chica, Texas, facility.

    As CNBC previously reported, the rocket made it off the launch pad — a triumph of sorts — but it also exploded, resulting in the Federal Aviation Administration grounding the program for the time being until further evaluation.

    Before the explosion, local environmental and indigenous rights groups protested the launch, anticipating harms to wildlife, people’s health and property.

    CNBC reached out to the Texas regional office of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the FAA for more details. A spokesperson for the FWS said the agency is now gathering information about any impacts from the explosion to habitat and wildlife in the area, and the FAA did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    Meanwhile, Musk continues to make controversial moves with Twitter, the social media platform he bought last year for $44 billion, selling billions of dollars worth of Tesla stock to help fund the purchase.

    This week, Twitter removed verified status from public figures and government accounts, including President Joe Biden, the pope, and even transit agencies, including San Francisco’s BART.

    Musk-led Twitter also removed “government-funded” and “China state-affiliated” labels from the Twitter accounts of a myriad of global media organizations. The labels implied government involvement in editorial decisions by those outlets. Most notably, Reuters first reported, Twitter dropped the “China state-affiliated media” label from the accounts of Xinhua News, and from the accounts of journalists associated with those publications.

    Source link

  • Tesla’s Profit Margins Were Just Bad. The Stock Is Diving.

    Tesla’s Profit Margins Were Just Bad. The Stock Is Diving.

    Price wars have consequences, even for Tesla, the world’s most valuable car company. 

    Tesla‘s (ticker: TSLA) first-quarter earnings, reported Wednesday evening, met expectations, but its first-quarter automotive gross profit margins were bad. No matter how investors slice and dice the numbers, results will leave them with questions about EV demand and Tesla’s pricing strategy.

    Source link

  • Tesla’s Price War Could Hit Its Profits

    Tesla’s Price War Could Hit Its Profits

    Electric vehicle leader


    Tesla


    is expected to report lower earnings on higher sales Wednesday evening after the electric vehicle maker slashed prices to draw in buyers.

    The EV war, with traditional auto makers spending billions to catch


    Tesla


    (ticker: TSLA), has morphed into a price war. The car maker’s quarterly earnings will help investors figure out who is winning.

    Source link

  • Ford unveils new Lincoln Nautilus to be imported from China

    Ford unveils new Lincoln Nautilus to be imported from China

    2024 Lincoln Nautilus

    Ford

    Ford Motor will import its next-generation Lincoln Nautilus from China to the U.S., the company said Monday night.

    The midsize crossover is currently produced for the U.S. at Ford’s Oakville Assembly Plant in Ontario, Canada. The automaker recently announced it would be investing 1.8 billion Canadian dollars (about $1.3 billion) to transition the facility into a new electric vehicle hub.

    This marks the first time Lincoln will import a vehicle to the U.S. from China.

    Importing a vehicle from China to the U.S. is not unprecedented but can draw public and political criticism or backlash, especially when tensions between the two countries are high.

    Most notably, General Motors has been criticized for importing its Buick Envision crossover from China to the U.S. since 2016. The Detroit automaker has sold more than 200,000 of the China-made vehicles, which American union officials have called the “Invasion” and “a slap in the face.”

    2024 Lincoln Nautilus 

    Ford

    Importing a vehicle from overseas to the U.S. can make good business sense, however, for a company such as Ford.

    “In this case, it’s a good use of resources,” said Stephanie Brinley, associate director of research at S&P Global Mobility. “Without importing, Lincoln does not get the product, and the brand needs products between now and when its EVs arrive.”

    Brinley said the decision to import the Nautilus does not suggest a fundamental shift for future Lincolns for the U.S. market, noting the company continues to produce most of its vehicles for the U.S. market in North America.

    “Lincoln is a global brand that is growing,” a Lincoln spokeswoman said in an email. “As we execute our U.S. manufacturing growth plans, we think it makes sense to centralize Nautilus production in China for both markets (since we already produce Nautilus in China for the local market) which allows us to gain manufacturing efficiencies and retool our Oakville facility to get ready to build our next generation EVs.”

    The news comes a week after Ford released a report that said it was the top automaker in terms of vehicles assembled and hourly autoworkers employed in America as well as vehicles exported from America to other countries.

    2024 Lincoln Nautilus 

    Ford

    The new Nautilus will feature a redesigned exterior and new interior that includes nearly door-to-door screens for occupants in the front seats. It also offers a new feature called “Lincoln Rejuvenate.”

    Ford describes Lincoln Rejuvenate as a “multisensory, in-cabin experience including lighting and digital scenting.” Lincoln revealed a concept vehicle called the Star last year that included such features, but the Nautilus is the first production car for the U.S. to be built with the unique characteristics. The automaker has offered vehicles with the feature in China.

    “Lincoln Rejuvenate, a stationary experience, orchestrates specially curated sensory experiences tied to lighting, screen visuals, personal preferences such as seating position and massage options — allowing clients to recharge,” the company said in a release for the vehicle’s reveal Monday night.

    Scent cartridges to fill the vehicle’s cabin are housed in the center armrest. The company said scents that come with the package include:

    • “Mystic Forest, an earthy blend with woody, rich notes of patchouli.”
    • “Ozonic Azure, a crisp blend of aromatic patchouli and traces of bright violet.”
    • “Violet Cashmere, exotic white florals and trusted violet that are crisp and refined as fresh linen.”

    Lincoln Star concept electric vehicle

    Lincoln

    The vehicle will be powered by a 2.0-liter turbocharged engine as well as a hybrid powertrain. The car is expected to go on sale in early 2024, with starting prices between $51,810 and $75,860.

    The redesigned Nautilus and “Lincoln Rejuvenate” come as the once-prominent American luxury brand attempts to rejuvenate itself.

    Sales of Lincoln vehicles were down by 4% last year in the U.S. to fewer than 83,500 vehicles. That’s down from a recent peak of more than 112,200 in 2019.

    Source link

  • Tesla Cuts Prices Again. Investors Should Focus on This Instead.

    Tesla Cuts Prices Again. Investors Should Focus on This Instead.

    It feels as if every day brings new price changes from


    Tesla


    Investors are getting used to them. The bigger deal now is the electric-vehicle company’s first-quarter gross profit margins are due to be reported in just a few days.

    Reuters reported Friday that Tesla cut prices for its electric vehicles in Europe and some other countries. The price of a Model 3 and Y in Germany were reduced about 5% and 10%, respectively.

    Source link

  • JPMorgan, Wells Fargo, Boeing, Lucid, and More Stock Market Movers

    JPMorgan, Wells Fargo, Boeing, Lucid, and More Stock Market Movers


    • Order Reprints

    • Print Article


    Source link