"Two years ago, car leasing group Octopus EV could barely keep up with the red-hot demand for Teslas that accounted for half its sales.
“Tesla had the market to themselves,” said Fiona Howarth, chief executive of Octopus EV, which has operations in the UK and US. Now the carmaker has “lost some of its competitive advantage”.
The scale of Tesla’s challenge was laid bare this week when its first-quarter sales fell short of the gloomiest Wall Street forecast. Threats are coming from multiple angles: cheaper Chinese brands such as BYD and MG, faltering demand in China and the US, its two key markets, and even the polarising personality of Elon Musk."
"But its status as the electric car champion — and one with a stock market valuation still dwarfing that of rivals — leaves Tesla particularly exposed. Unlike legacy manufacturers, it does not have petrol models to fall back on, and nor does it make hybrids, whose sales have picked up over the past year as buyers opt for something less than fully electric.
Cooling demand “poses a unique challenge for Tesla as it is seeing the greater slowdown is in its home (and largest) market, the US,” said Mike Tyndall, an analyst at HSBC.
The slowdown has sent Tesla’s shares down 31 per cent this year, making it the second-worst performer on the S&P 500. The group’s market capitalisation has almost halved from its late-2021 peak of $1.2tn, when investors’ faith in the messianic powers of Musk went unquestioned."
FT.com
“Tesla had the market to themselves,” said Fiona Howarth, chief executive of Octopus EV, which has operations in the UK and US. Now the carmaker has “lost some of its competitive advantage”.
The scale of Tesla’s challenge was laid bare this week when its first-quarter sales fell short of the gloomiest Wall Street forecast. Threats are coming from multiple angles: cheaper Chinese brands such as BYD and MG, faltering demand in China and the US, its two key markets, and even the polarising personality of Elon Musk."
"But its status as the electric car champion — and one with a stock market valuation still dwarfing that of rivals — leaves Tesla particularly exposed. Unlike legacy manufacturers, it does not have petrol models to fall back on, and nor does it make hybrids, whose sales have picked up over the past year as buyers opt for something less than fully electric.
Cooling demand “poses a unique challenge for Tesla as it is seeing the greater slowdown is in its home (and largest) market, the US,” said Mike Tyndall, an analyst at HSBC.
The slowdown has sent Tesla’s shares down 31 per cent this year, making it the second-worst performer on the S&P 500. The group’s market capitalisation has almost halved from its late-2021 peak of $1.2tn, when investors’ faith in the messianic powers of Musk went unquestioned."
FT.com