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Tesla Stock Slides On Reports of California Layoffs, Office Closure

The Street2022-06-29

  • Tesla has reportedly closed its San Mateo office, and laid off 200 employees, as it begins a wave of cost cuts throughout the carmaker's global operations.

Tesla shares edged lower Wednesday following a report that the clean-energy carmaker has laid off around 200 workers in a California office focused on its auto pilot system.

The layoffs, first reported by Bloomberg, are said to affect hourly workers at the San Mateo location -- which we reportedly face closure -- in a move that would contradict CEO Elon Musk's assertion that the 10% job cuts he said would be needed would only affect salaried employees.

In a company-wide email sent earlier this month, Musk warned of a ""super bad" feeling about the global economy and cautioned on impending job cuts.

The San Mateo decision also suggests Tesla is heading into a period of deep cost cuts following a difficult second quarter marred by production halts in Shanghai, surging input costs, supply chain snarls and the worst three-month decline for bitcoin -- a major Tesla investment -- in more than four years.

Tesla shares were marked 1.5% lower in pre-market trading at $687.30 each, a move that would extend the stock's year-to-date decline to around 35%.

Short interest in Tesla shares remains elevated, according to recent data from S3 Partners, with bets against the stock representing around $19.3 billion in value, or 2.56% of the stock's outstanding float.

Earlier this month, Tesla boosted the cost of its long-range Model Y by around 5%, to $65,990, while the base cost for the Model 3 long range sedan rose $2,000 to $57,990. Model S prices were increased by $5,000 to $104,990. The changes mark the second price increase of this year and the third since last October.

Raw materials prices, as well as labor costs linked to overall production cycles, have risen steadily over the past year, while Nickel prices -- a crucial component in EV battery making -- have risen around 30% so far this year to around $25,500 per ton on the London Metals Exchange, while battery-grade lithium carbonate prices are up around 60% from early 2021 levels.

Disclaimer: Investing carries risk. This is not financial advice. The above content should not be regarded as an offer, recommendation, or solicitation on acquiring or disposing of any financial products, any associated discussions, comments, or posts by author or other users should not be considered as such either. It is solely for general information purpose only, which does not consider your own investment objectives, financial situations or needs. TTM assumes no responsibility or warranty for the accuracy and completeness of the information, investors should do their own research and may seek professional advice before investing.

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Comment18

  • Looyusooi
    ·2022-06-30
    Ok 
    Reply
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  • Gladys8jk
    ·2022-06-30
    Ok
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  • Yuanecute
    ·2022-06-30
    wow
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  • miker9110
    ·2022-06-30
    K
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  • AxelOng
    ·2022-06-29
    Cut cost
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  • GggSlimeR
    ·2022-06-29
    Oh no Thanks & Do not like my comment 
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  • RW52
    ·2022-06-29
    Less overheads, more profits ya?[Sly] [Miser] [Cool] 
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  • Diluc
    ·2022-06-29
    Sad
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  • 来人
    ·2022-06-29
    Ok
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  • chinks29
    ·2022-06-29
    Ok
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  • hphoa
    ·2022-06-29
    [Heartbreak] 
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  • eo1668
    ·2022-06-29
    ohh
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  • Shawrac
    ·2022-06-29
    Bad.....
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  • KryZ
    ·2022-06-29
    Oops
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  • GG21
    ·2022-06-29
    😔 
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  • Jliang
    ·2022-06-29
    Please like
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  • N00b
    ·2022-06-29
    Ok
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  • P.Dwayne
    ·2022-06-29
    Oh no, is Musk planning to open a bigger office? 
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