Tesla Outlook Disappoints Some On Wall St, Shares Drop 7 Percent

 Tesla Motors Inc (TSLA.O), led by billionaire Elon Musk, on Wednesday offered an outlook for the second quarter that disappointed some investors, sending shares of the electric car maker down more than 7 percent in after-hours trading.

Tesla posted a higher-than-expected first-quarter operating profit and said its operating automotive gross margins in the current quarter would increase slightly. S&P Capital IQ analyst Efraim Levy called the outlook a disappointment, saying investors had hoped for something better.

The Palo Alto, California-based company reported a first-quarter net loss of almost $50 million, compared with its first quarterly profit a year ago.

Tesla said it would spend up to $850 million this year to boost production capacity of its Model S luxury electric sedan, develop the Model X crossover vehicle and start construction of a new lithium-ion battery plant, dubbed the "gigafactory." It said that would leave the company with a negative free cash flow for 2014.

Like other so-called momentum stocks, Tesla's shares have fallen recently and at the close of the market on Wednesday were down more than 20 percent from an all-time high of $265 in mid-February. In after-hours activity, Tesla shares traded at $186.60, after closing at $201.35.

The company said the project to begin production of lithium-ion batteries at the gigafactory is on course for 2017 and the plant should reach its full production rate in 2020.

"We have not yet finalized the ultimate location for the gigafactory and we are going to start work on at least two locations in parallel in order to minimize risk of delays arising after groundbreaking," Musk said in a letter to shareholders posted online.

He later said on a conference call with analysts that the company would break ground at the first location probably next month, followed by the second site one to two months later.

The company has said it would choose the location for the plant from Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico or Texas, and Musk said on Wednesday that California was potentially back in the running but still improbable given the state's more onerous regulatory environment.

Tesla said in February it planned to raise $1.6 billion through convertible senior notes to finance the factory. Analysts have said it would require a capital infusion of $5 billion to $6 billion.

LETTER OF INTENT FOR BATTERY FACTORY

Musk said on Wednesday that Tesla had signed a letter of intent for the factory with battery supplier Panasonic Corp (6752.T), but was still in talks with other potential partners. Executives expect the Panasonic deal to be finalized later this year.

Panasonic would be the only company producing battery cells in the gigafactory, but the supplier as well as other companies would ship in cells from other plants, Musk said.

Analysts have said Tesla needs to get the plans for the battery plant finalized soon if it wants to meet its 2017 production target.

Musk also said the company expects to begin selling Model X crossover vehicles in the second quarter of next year.

Excluding one-time items, Tesla earned $17 million, or 12 cents a share, in the first quarter, two cents better than what analysts polled by Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S had expected. The results included a currency gain of $6.7 million.

On a net basis, Tesla lost $49.8 million, or 40 cents a share, compared with a profit last year of $11.25 million, or 10 cents a share. Net revenue rose 10 percent from last year to almost $621 million, while operating revenue was up 27 percent at $713 million.

The first-quarter included no revenue from zero-emission vehicle credit sales, as the company had forecast, and $12 million in other environmental credit sales. In the same quarter last year, those totals were $67.9 million and $17.1 million, respectively.

Tesla said it delivered 6,457 Model S cars in the first quarter, slightly above the 6,400 it had forecast in February. It also reiterated its full-year delivery target of more than 35,000 cars, including a forecast of about 7,500 cars in the second quarter.

Tesla also said battery cell supply will still constrain company vehicle production in the second quarter but that situation should improve in the third quarter. The company said its production rate is now at almost 700 vehicles per week, up 15 percent from the end of the fourth quarter, and should rise to 1,000 per week by the end of 2014.

The company started selling Model S sedans in China last month and Musk said demand there was strong and the company would have to open a plant in that country within three to four years. He said it will also study opening a plant in Europe.

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