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RBN Energy:
Gulf Coast waterborne crude flows adjust to a new world.
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Tesla
Updates
April 6, 2016: it took awhile, but
The Los Angeles Times finally noted the same thing -- not all Tesla owners will get the tax credits. This is a non-story. Hillary will be elected president, and to be re-elected, she will pander to Californians and eliminate the 200,000 car sales threshold. It's a non-story.
Original Post
Tesla: was it just me, or was the Tesla event last night underwhelming? Whatever. Tesla says it has 135,000 orders for the $35,000 mass-produced Model 3 that will get 215+ miles on a single charge. Delivery date: "next year." Meanwhile
CNBC is reporting that Tesla short interest has hit a record high:
Twenty five percent of all Tesla shares are out on loan, according to data from Markit, figures the firm
uses as an indication of short selling. Short selling occurs when
traders bet that the share price will fall. Markit highlighted that
short interest is now at an all-time high for Tesla since its IPO in 2010.
"Doubts have been raised about Tesla's ability to profitably crack the
mass market especially since the company has so far been unable to
deliver an operating profit on its current line-up of higher-end cars," [said one analyst].
"Tesla's short interest is nearly twice that of the second most shorted,
Harley-Davidson, which has 14 percent of its shares currently shorted."
Underwhelming. I guess I wasn't the only one underwhelmed. Michael Hiltzik, over at
The Los Angeles Times, covered the hype as well as anyone.
Tesla hype watch: You know the Model 3 doesn't exist yet, right?
First of all, the Model 3 doesn't exist yet, neither in a final
production version or actually in production. Nor will it be reaching
the road any time soon. During the introductory event Thursday, Musk
said he felt "fairly confident" that deliveries would start by the end
of 2017. But no guarantees. [I watched the streaming event "live" - Musk certainly did sound like the car would be ready by the "deadline."]
Customers may not be eligible for tax credits. Among
the forces behind the acceptance of electric cars are government
credits, including an IRS credit of up to $7,500 for Tesla vehicles
such as the Model 3. The problem is that those credits start to
disappear once a manufacturer has delivered 200,000 electric vehicles.
That may well happen before the first Model 3's are placed in customers'
hands; given Tesla's production forecasts for its Model X and Model S
luxury cars, it's almost certain to happen very soon after Model 3
deliveries start. So calculations that the real list price of the new
car is a competitive $27,500 rather than $35,000 may be way off. ["Way off" seems a bit harsh; spreading the cost over 6 years will minimize the delta in monthly payments whether it's $27.K or $35K.
And finally, financial health: According to its annual report, Tesla roared through its cash last year
to the tune of more than $700 million, leaving it with less than $1.2
billion cash on hand when Musk was projecting $1.5 billion in capital
expenditures on the horizon.
Tesla's new competitor:
the Bolt.
Forget about old grudge matches like Chevrolet vs. Ford or Honda vs.
Toyota. The fight brewing between General Motors and Tesla Motors is
shaping up to be nastier. Both will soon be going after the customer who
can spend $30,000 or more on an electric car, as GM launches the Chevy
Bolt at the end of this year and Tesla begins selling the Model 3 in
2017. GM showed off the Bolt in January, and Tesla will unveil the
Model 3 on March 31.
Tax breaks on EVs:
there's a limit.
Like the prior program of income-tax credits for purchase of a
hybrid-electric car, which ended several years ago, there's a cap on how
many cars from each maker qualify for the credits.
But whereas hybrids were capped at 60,000 vehicles per carmaker, plug-in vehicles have a higher cap: 200,000 cars per manufacturer.
That applies to sales in the United States only, and once that number
is achieved, the credits start to phase out over a one-year period
starting in the second quarter after that total is reached.
For two quarters, the credit is halved; for a third quarter, it is set at 25 percent of the original amount. Then, it's done.
Some automakers are getting close:
Nissan is one of them.
Both Nissan and General Motors are roughly one-third of the way toward sales of the maximum number of plug-in electric cars that qualify for a Federal income-tax credit of $7,500.
Update, April 3, 2016: as expected, that $35,000 price tag is a mirage; it it expected that the average
cost will be $42,000, and it's likely that anyone ordering now is not going to get the tax credit. Well more than 200,000 have reserved a Model 3, and once a company sells 200,000 EVs, the tax credits phase out. I doubt man of the folks now reserving a Model 3 need the tax credit. [My hunch is that Congress will raise the "limit" as companies start to approach 200,000 sales.]
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Auto sales for March: pending -- will be updated as data comes in -- at bottom of this post.
MediaPost is anticipating --
Although indications show demand for new cars is
weakening, automakers are poised to reach their highest monthly sales
volume in 10 years.
New-vehicle sales are
expected to rise 8% year-over-year to 1.66 million units in March,
according to Kelley Blue Book, resulting in an estimated 17.2 million
seasonally adjusted annual rate.
The
1.66 million units will bring the
first quarter total to 4.15 million, which is up 5% year-over-year,
making this the second-highest first quarter on record, surpassed only
by Q1 2000. This could be the highest
March sales total since 2000, when sales also hit 1.66 million units,
and the highest volume total of any month since July 2005.
Fiat
Chrysler could have the best month, with
double-digit growth expected in March. The largest year-over-year
improvements will be from Dodge Grand Caravan and Chrysler Town &
Country minivans. The Jeep brand also should post another record in
March with year-over-year strength headlined by the Renegade.
[Analysts anticipate] that American
Honda will report double-digit growth in March, led by the new Civic. In
addition, the new HR-V continues to perform well and collect industry
awards, including Kelley Blue Book’s 5-Year Cost to
Own Award. Meanwhile, the Honda Pilot is one of the fastest-selling
models this month, averaging just 18 days in dealer inventory.
Auto sales:
Barclay's is negative --
Analysts forecast that auto sales rose at an annualized rate of 17.3 million.
This would be down from the pace
of 17.54 million recorded last month. And already, some analysts are
debating over whether the pace of auto sales has peaked, following the
best-ever year recorded in 2015.
Barclays' Brian Johnson is betting that the seasonally adjusted annual
rate of sales has peaked "with an impending decline". But this could be
delayed by the availability of auto credit, and strong consumer
spending.
Jobs report:
from Reuters --
Nonfarm payrolls increased
215,000 for the month of March. Data for
January and February was revised slightly down to show 1,000 fewer jobs
created than previously reported.
Average
hourly earnings increased seven cents. While the unemployment rate rose
to 5.0 percent from an eight-year low of 4.9 percent, it was because
more Americans continued to return to the labor force, a sign of
confidence in the jobs market.
GDPNow:
latest forecast, April 1, 2016 -- follows today's labor report (unemployment back up to 5%):
The GDPNow model forecast for real GDP growth (seasonally adjusted annual rate) in the first quarter of 2016 is 0.7 percent
on April 1, up from 0.6 percent on March 28. After this morning's
construction spending release from the U.S. Census Bureau, the forecast
for first-quarter real residential investment growth increased from 7.8
percent to 9.1 percent while the forecast for real nonresidential
structures investment growth increased from -9.3 percent to -8.4
percent.
Saudi Aramco and connecting the dots:
updated.
Google still has Android Pay, but
will discontinue Google Wallet.
The
closure comes as parent company Alphabet has focused on reining in its
less profitable divisions. Google hired Ruth Porat as chief financial
officer in May 2015, and the Wall Street Journal reported in July that
the former Morgan Stanley CFO was leading an internal audit to trim the
company’s non-revenue generating fat. Ex-executives said as recently as 2013 that Google Wallet loses money on each transaction because of the high fees it pays credit card companies.
Google Wallet was
originally intended to make in-store payments with Android devices, but
that function was split into another service, Android Pay, which
launched in 2014 after Apple launched its Apple Pay mobile wallet.
Google Wallet is now focused on peer-to-peer payments, which has gained a bit of traction.
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Auto Sales
Ford Motor Co. said Friday that U.S. sales rose 8% to 254,711 vehicles, its best
March sales result since 2001.
Lincoln sales grew 11%, while Ford F-Series sales rose 9%. "Total Ford
brand SUVs are off to their best start in company history, with first
quarter total sales of 188,100 -- up 15 percent versus a year ago," the
company said in a statement. Shares fell 1.5% in premarket trade, and
are down 4% in the year to date, while the S&P 500 has gained 0.8%.
Nissan:
sales rose 13 percent in March, exceeding analyst estimates as
consumers in its largest market kept up demand for its crossovers and
sedans, while Ford Motor Co. sales rose less than analysts had
projected.
Nissan’s deliveries reached 163,559 cars and light
trucks, the Japanese automaker said in a statement Friday. On average,
analysts had projected 11 percent growth, the third-biggest estimated
gain among the largest U.S. and Asian automakers. Sales of the Altima,
Sentra and Maxima all rose, leading to a 16 percent expansion of Nissan
brand car sales, and Murano crossover deliveries jumped 56 percent.
Sales by the company’s Infiniti luxury line rose 10 percent from last
March. Ford’s light-vehicle sales rose 7.8 percent, compared with
estimates for a 9.4 percent increase.
GM:
sales edged up 1% for the month to 252,128, far below the 6% hike analysts expected.
The company delivered 193,525 vehicles to retail
customers, up 6% year over year, driven by a 7% hike in sales of its
flagship Chevrolet brand cars, and a 13% jump in sales at its GMC truck
division. Chevrolet sales were up 10% for the first quarter.
Toyota:
Honda:
Chrysler:
More on Ford:
Ford Posts Best March U.S. Sales in 10 Years, Best First-Quarter Results since 2006
- Ford Motor Company U.S. sales of 254,711 vehicles for March up 8 percent versus last year; first quarter sales total 645,626 vehicles – up 9 percent
- Ford brand SUVs reach best first quarter sales start in company history, best March sales since 2001 – March Edge sales up 49 percent, Escape grows 8 percent and Explorer gains 4 percent
- Ford F-Series sales up 9 percent, for best March and first quarter start in a decade; commercial vans produce best March sales in 38 years, led by record Transit sales
- Lincoln sales grew 11 percent, thanks to the brand’s best March performance for sport utility vehicles since 2001; Lincoln brand SUVs up 27 percent in first quarter
- Customers continue buying high-end SUVs and trucks, helping the Ford
brand increase its average transaction prices by more than $1,600 per
vehicle in March – nearly double the industry average
But then this,
from Investor's Business Daily:
U.S. auto sales fell short of analyst estimates in March, as each of the Big Three U.S. makers — Ford Motor, General Motors, and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles — missed forecasts.
Industry executives and analysts had said industry sales could start
to level off this year after several years of boisterous growth. The
annualized pace of U.S. sales cooled to 16.57 million last month, down from 17.5 million in February and below
views for an uptick to 17.6 million.
Ford’s March U.S. sales rose 8% year over year to 254,711 vehicles,
led by SUVs and Ford F-150 brand pickups, the best-selling vehicle of
any type in the country for 30-plus years. However, Wall Street expected
a 9.4% increase.
Despite the miss, the No. 2 U.S. automaker’s sales grew 9% to 645,636
cars in the first quarter, marking the best sales performance for March
and Q1 since 2006. Average transaction prices rose by more than $1,600
per vehicle for the month.
Fiat Chrysler sales rose 8% to 197,261 units, the company’s best March
sales in a decade but below analyst forecasts for 13.9%. Sales growth
was led by its Jeep brand, which climbed 15% vs. the same month a year
earlier.
I'm not sure what to make of this.