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Tesla Motors CEO Elon Musk introduces the falcon wing door on the Model X electric sports-utility vehicles during a presentation in California in this September 2015 file photo. Photo: Reuters

Tesla shares surge 10 per cent as Musk brings forward profit deadline from 2020 to this year

Shares still down over 30 per cent this year; CEO says cheaper Model 3 to be unveiled in March

Tesla

Tesla Motors will start making money this year, its chief executive Elon Musk said on Wednesday in a promise to investors that sent the electric luxury car maker’s shares up sharply despite a wider fourth-quarter loss.

Tesla shares rose more than 10 per cent in after-hours trading after the company forecast a 60 to 80 per cent increase in vehicle sales this year and promised it would turn a profit on an adjusted basis. It will start generating positive cash flow in March.

Tesla shares are still down more than 30 per cent since the beginning of the year, reflecting investor concerns about continued losses.

Musk and the company’s new chief financial officer, Jason Wheeler, sought to assure investors on a conference call on Wednesday evening that Tesla is determined to cut costs, hit production targets and stanch losses.

“Cash is king,” Wheeler said.

READ MORE: With Tesla’s Model S now Hong Kong’s top-selling sedan, chief Elon Musk predicts city to become world leader in electric vehicles

Musk said Tesla would make its first net profit by the fourth quarter. It plans to invest US$1.5 billion to add capacity, start production at a huge battery factory in Nevada and open more showrooms.

Tesla’s cash reserves dropped to US$1.2 billion as of December 31 from US$1.9 billion a year earlier, despite a sale of shares last summer.

The company’s cash burn has become a concern for some analysts, given the heavy capital spending it has mapped out. The slower-than-planned launch of the company’s Model X sport utility vehicle during the last quarter added US$67 million in unplanned costs, Tesla said.

“I feel very good about things right now,” Musk said. “The last several months have been quite excruciating.”

READ MORE: On the safe side: Tesla removes autopilot from Hong Kong cars to keep within law

Tesla straddles the digital technology and automotive industries, which have been hard hit this year by investors worried that growth is slowing in both sectors. General Motors earlier this month reported record profit, but its shares have fallen 18 per cent this year.

Tesla shares rose despite a wider fourth-quarter net loss of US$2.44 a share, compared with a loss of 86 cents a share a year earlier. Tesla reported an adjusted loss of 87 cents per share in the fourth quarter, while analysts expected a profit of 10 cents a share, according to Thomson Reuters.

Deliveries of Model S sedans and Model X SUVs were 17,478 vehicles in the quarter, at the low end of prior forecasts. Revenue rose nearly 27 per cent to US$1.21 billion.

Tesla said it planned to deliver 80,000-90,000 Model S and Model X vehicles in 2016, ahead of Wall Street’s average expectation for about 79,000 vehicles, according to research firm FactSet StreetAccount.

Tesla said its long-promised moderately priced car, the Model 3, would be unveiled on March 31. That car will have a starting price of about US$35,000 before government incentives and subsidies and will launch in 2017, Tesla has said.

By that time, GM has said it will already be selling its Chevrolet Bolt, at a similar price with a range of 322 kilometres (200 miles) between charges. Musk brushed off a comparison with the Bolt.

“It doesn’t seem like we are going to be demand-constrained,” he said.

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