snapchat layoffs
The cuts could help Snap approach profitability after a year in which it recorded losses of $720 million, before interest, taxes and charges like stock compensation expenses. Snap's co-founder and Chief Executive Evan Spiegel told employees in a letter several months ago that he wanted to break even in 2018, according to a report Thursday in The Information.
hey employees... new goal: dont lose money
These spreads actually looked low even before the news of Branderiz's departure, considering Tesla's growing reliance on negative working capital to fund its operations (see this) and its net debt doubling last year to $6.8 billion (see this).
There's more to be found off the balance sheet, too. According to Tesla's annual filing, which dropped a couple of weeks ago, it's potentially on the hook for an estimated $8.5 billion of contracted purchases over the next three years alone. Most of this relates to batteries coming from Panasonic Corp. and emphasizes the importance of Model 3 production catching up with the vast ambitions set ahead of it.
Edited by Chthonic_Goat_666 ()
Chthonic_Goat_666 posted:
Im sure that will be np because hyperloop is for bicycles now
business press seems to have run out of patience with tesla lately. paywalled article so here ya go:
Elon Musk recently told attendees at the South by Southwest festival that two things are keeping him up at night: an apocalyptic future created by artificial intelligence, and production delays of Tesla Inc.’s Model 3 car.
Mr. Musk has good reason to worry about Tesla. The auto maker is entering one of the most critical phases in its history, a make-or-break period in which Tesla must boost production of the Model 3 or possibly face severe financial consequences.
In April, Tesla will reveal whether it is on track to meet an ambitious second-quarter target of producing 5,000 Model 3s a week—a goal that it already twice delayed. The Model 3 is Tesla’s mainstream electric-car offering, priced more affordably than Tesla’s luxury models, and a key part of Mr. Musk’s strategy to broaden the company’s business.
Meeting the goal of 5,000 Model 3s a week by the end of June is critical to generating enough cash to sustain operations without having to raise more capital. Tesla burned through on average about $1 billion a quarter last year, largely because of heavy investments to bring production of the Model 3 online. That left it with nearly $3.4 billion in cash at year-end, suggesting that at a similar pace it would be out of cash later this year unless it can raise more funds or substantially boost production.
UBS analyst Colin Langan calculates that Tesla will continue burning cash until it reaches the 5,000-a-week inflection point for a quarter, a milestone that he calculates would generate about $1 billion in working capital in the short term.
If Tesla can’t meet the goal, it would face greater pressure to raise money from the debt or equity markets, which could be challenging if investors lose confidence. Tesla says it has $2 billion in unused credit facilities and funds, though some of the capital is subject to specific conditions for use. However, it also faces higher interest payments tied to $10 billion in debt and increased costs associated with the production ramp.
Since going public in 2010, Tesla has burned through about $10 billion in cash, an unusually large sum for a publicly traded U.S. company of its size, said Bernstein analyst Toni Sacconaghi. Tesla has a market capitalization of roughly $57 billion.
Barclays analyst Brian Johnson expects the company to raise more money in the third quarter if it proves it can build 5,000 Model 3s a week—a rate equating to roughly 250,000 vehicles in a single year, about what a typical automotive factory produces.
Mr. Musk said at SXSW that Tesla is “making good progress” on Model 3 production. He is grappling with these challenges after losing a number of financial executives. In recent days, Tesla’s chief accounting officer and treasurer both left, following last year’s exit of the financial chief and last month’s departure of the top sales executive.
The company declined to make Deepak Ahuja, who rejoined as chief financial officer last year, available to comment.
Mr. Musk has repeatedly defied the odds. At SXSW on Sunday, he recounted how Tesla nearly went into bankruptcy in 2008 when money ran tight. Although many investors shorted the stock over the years, he proved Tesla could build a global luxury brand of electric cars with a devoted following beyond environmentalists.
But Tesla is no longer a startup. It is a 38,000-person company that is trying to compete with the world’s largest auto makers. Mr. Musk has eschewed operating profit and racked up debt as he chases his dream of making a mainstream electric sedan. He had earlier pledged to deliver 500,000 vehicles this year, about five times last year’s total.
These hurdles have weighed on Tesla’s stock. Its share price has stalled since surging in early 2017 to give it a market value rivaling General Motors Co. The stock has fallen about 14% since around the time it began production of the Model 3 nine months ago.
“Some big investors are losing patience,” said Nathan Weiss of Unit Economics, a research arm of investment firm Weiss, Harrington & Associates LLC, which has a bearish bet on Tesla but doesn’t own shares. “They are less excited about it than they were a year ago.”
Some investors are watching indicators of credit strength that are generally regarded as a gauge of a company’s likelihood of bankruptcy, such as the “Altman Z-Score,” which was developed by a New York University professor, Edward Altman in the late 1960s.
Based on the Z-Score formula—which takes into account a number of variables, including share price, working capital, retained earnings and other items—Tesla had a score of 1.26, its lowest score for any quarter since 2014. Any company with a score below 1.8 is considered distressed by many investors. A score of 1.0 or lower suggests bankruptcy is likely within two years.
Three of Tesla’s 10 largest shareholders have recently sold shares of the auto maker, according to the shareholders’ latest quarterly filings. Fidelity Investments, the second-largest Tesla shareholder behind Mr. Musk with a nearly 10% stake, sold close to one-third of its shares in the final three quarters of 2017, filings show. A Fidelity spokesman declined to comment.
Other shareholders have piled in. T. Rowe Price Group Inc. more than doubled its stake in the fourth quarter, making it the fourth-largest owner of Tesla shares.
Woman in Arizona killed by self driving Uber car
https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2018/03/welcome-hell-barcelona-taxi-drivers-prepare-ubers-return.html
Dimashq posted:https://mobile-reuters-com.cdn.ampproject.org/c/s/mobile.reuters.com/article/amp/idUSKBN1GV296Woman in Arizona killed by self driving Uber car
ilmdge posted:Dimashq posted:https://mobile-reuters-com.cdn.ampproject.org/c/s/mobile.reuters.com/article/amp/idUSKBN1GV296Woman in Arizona killed by self driving Uber car
the police released a video and the driver appears to be texting while occasionally looking up at the road
https://t.co/pZJavwBHN3 would solve car break-ins instantly:
— jason (@Jason) March 17, 2018
1. double number of cops
2. camera network with facial recognition (w/privacy protections obviously)
3. bait cars w/cameras & press push
4. no bail if you're picked up for breaking into a car https://t.co/HqGGtM5RJe
One of Uber's first investors is running for mayor of san Fransisco on a police + technology platform
camera network with facial recognition (w/privacy protections obviously)
obviously
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-03-25/uber-is-said-to-reach-agreement-on-southeast-asian-sale-to-grab
Edited by Chthonic_Goat_666 ()
The volatility in Tesla shares has bitten the longs with a 15% decline in 19 trading days, and the bulls are struggling to make coherent arguments. This Barron's article, for instance, misspells both the name of the company--it's T-E-S-L-A--and the name of the firm at which the analyst who is bullish on Tesla works. That's pathetic,
shriekingviolet posted:The volatility in Tesla shares has bitten the longs with a 15% decline in 19 trading days, and the bulls are struggling to make coherent arguments. This Barron's article, for instance, misspells both the name of the company--it's T-E-S-L-A--and the name of the firm at which the analyst who is bullish on Tesla works. That's pathetic,
large recall on tesla model s. now considerable mainstream press scepticism about tesla.
https://medium.com/@moran2017j/time-for-tesla-to-listen-ab5c6259fc88
Tesla isn’t a startup anymore. It’s here to stay.
we'll see about that :/
lo posted:cthonic goat do you know if local alternatives to uber are affecting them at all? i noticed a company here the other day who were big on being 'locally owned' and i wondered how much competition there actually is there.
depends how deep their pockets are i think. to compete with uber you have to spend big, undercutting their prices to attract consumers, offering better pay than uber to poach drivers' time, advertising blitz, etc. there's definitely a few who can compete and have comparably deep pockets; lyft, didi chuxing. on the other hand there are others which are obvious failures; in australia we have "gocatch" which is considered a joke among drivers - they were also trying the locally owned marketing angle.
Edited by Chthonic_Goat_666 ()
https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2018/04/hubert-horan-can-uber-ever-deliver-part-fourteen-new-yorker-lays-template-pro-uber-propaganda.html
i haven't read the article he's referring to yet. i'll go through it soon and see if i can pull out any interesting quotes.
Edited by Chthonic_Goat_666 ()