Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Transportation Power Technology

Tesla Model 3 Becomes Best Selling Electric Car In World (cleantechnica.com) 164

Jose Pontes of EV Volumes and CleanTechnica has crunched some numbers and found that the Tesla Model 3 is now the best selling plug-in vehicle in the world. "In fact, the Model 3 was approximately 55,000 sales above the #2 BAIC EC-Series, an extremely popular Chinese model," CleanTechnica reports. "The Model 3 gobbled 7% of the plug-in vehicle market, while the #2 EC-Series and #3 Nissan LEAF each had 4%." From the report: After those top three, as the chart shows, the Tesla Model S and Model X were #4 and #5, respectively. They were followed by three Chinese models and then the Toyota Prius Prime and Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV. The Model 3 (and others) helped push the world plug-in vehicle share up to 2.1% in 2018. (Double that 4 times and we're at about 30% market share.) [...] Remember, 93% of plug-in vehicle sales in 2018 were not Model 3 sales. Nearly 2 million non -- Model 3 electric cars, SUVs, and crossovers made it into consumers' parking spots. Still, there's clearly a new king of the hill, and its young Tesla's 4th model.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Tesla Model 3 Becomes Best Selling Electric Car In World

Comments Filter:
  • the Tesla Model 3 is now the best selling plug-in vehicle in the world. "In fact, the Model 3 was approximately 55,000 sales above the #2 BAIC EC-Series, an extremely popular Chinese model,"

    I believe the Chinese will come from behind and "win" this thing, if the trends in manufacturing are to be believed.

    Needless to say, their product will definitely be cheaper. So I'll wait.

    • I'm not surprised that the Tesla model 3 is the best selling electric car; I'd be surprised if it wasn't.

      Like many things, it does seem likely that a lower-cost mass produced competitor is likely, in the long run, to take the lead, though.

      • Re:Not surprised (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Rei ( 128717 ) on Sunday February 10, 2019 @02:45PM (#58100046) Homepage

        The issue is that you don't just need a lower sale price; you also need a lower production cost. One intuitively expects these two to correlate, but at low volumes, they don't; so long as EVs are a small percentage of a manufacturer's sales, pricing is more dictated by factors such as legal compliance, trying to establish a place in the market, and maturing one's designs.

        As it stands, EV profitability varies greatly [twimg.com] between manufacturers.

        The primary problem is that your base costs - batteries - are high, but your incremental costs - such as motor power - are low. A Model 3 drive unit, for example, was estimated by Munro & Associates to cost $754 - yet just the catalytic converter alone on a Prius costs more than double that. So, whether you're making some slow, plodding, econobox EV, or some lightning-speed entry-level luxury EV, the differences in production cost aren't that great. The exact same situation applies to China - battery cells are traded globally, and Chinese EV makers face the exact same challenges in making their battery packs affordable. Sure, they can cut costs on the rest of the vehicle - but you're still stuck with needing an expensive battery pack (or selling cars with poor range and charge speeds).

        Thankfully, battery prices have been falling like a stone. So this situation keeps improving every year.

        • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

          by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          This doesn't make a lot of sense. You say Tesla is making huge margins, but for some reason they are shedding staff to try to get costs down so they can release the $35k Model 3. Why can't they fulfill people's pre-orders in the mean time by cutting the margin slightly?

          You are also comparing an established EV manufacturer with mature battery factory to the guys still in the fast ramp to phase. If this is where Tesla is after so many years and with so much volume, compared to say Hyundai-Kia who are already

          • by Anonymous Coward

            Hyundai & Kia Were already making cars. Tesla had to make cars from scratch, Hyundai only needed to learn EV stuff. Bodies, suspension, steering, brakes - they already knew that stuff well. Huyndai also makes EVs and gasoline cars using the same body - lots of shared components for the mass production.

            As for the lower price - a Hyundai is a much smaller car. Shorter range, less room inside, less power. Less power also means lower top speed, cheaper brakes, cheaper tires, cheaper suspension. A nice car f

          • by Socguy ( 933973 )
            They are the cutbacks are mostly in the S and X program. They are established cars and have room to become more efficient.
          • Kia Kona will have limited production, to be available only in CA.

            Tesla is making gross margin on the car 20% or so on the higher end cars with average sale price above 50K. It does not have costs down to 30K to sell 35K model 3 with profits. Estimates are, the short range model will cost 28K to make at the volume of half a million a year. Tesla is still struggling to make 350 K a year consistently in Fremont.

            Shorts have succeeded in cutting Tesla access to capital. So it is trying to fully fund the ram

          • by Rei ( 128717 )

            This doesn't make a lot of sense. You say Tesla is making huge margins, but for some reason they are shedding staff to try to get costs down so they can release the $35k Model 3.

            Duh. How exactly do you think you bring the cost of a car down - magic? You reduce parts and labour cost. The latter is known as layoffs.

            And it's not a "Rei says" they're making huge margins; it's their official filed quarterly statements, for the past half decade.

            Why can't they fulfill people's pre-orders in the mean time by c

          • by bgarcia ( 33222 )

            Why can't they fulfill people's pre-orders in the mean time by cutting the margin slightly?

            They've already done that to an extent. They've dropped the price on all of their vehicles within the past month. But they also need to bring down costs.

            ...compared to say Hyundai-Kia who are already profitable well below $35k and at lower volume...

            Where did you get the impression that Hyundai sells a profitable EV?

            Low margin, huge potential for Ioniq: Hyundai [goauto.com.au]

            “We have minimal margin, just slightly above

    • by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Sunday February 10, 2019 @02:49PM (#58100064) Journal
      Very sensible attitude. You will not be disappointed when you get an electric car at the price you are comfortable with, be it Tesla or not.

      Among the early adopters a vast majority are also the same sensible people, knowingly and willingly paying way over their normal price range for the model 3. The most common models traded in for the model 3 were Camrys, priuses and accords. My own comfort price range is 25K, and I paid 55K way beyond my comfort zone. I had heard numerous owners say the same thing.

      As the prices fall, you might be tempted to stretch your price range too, it has that kind of effect, once you test drive one.

      • by beanpoppa ( 1305757 ) on Sunday February 10, 2019 @03:21PM (#58100188)
        Agreed. My typical new car is about $40k, but I went well above to $55k for my 3. After about $11k in tax savings, and free charging at work, it comes out cheaper than $40k.
        • by rednip ( 186217 )

          Every morning I park what might be my last gasoline engine car near the 'plug in' area at work. However, even though I'm one of the first 10% of the people in the office, both chargers are usually occupied. Unfortunately, I suspect that I'd never really be able to take advantage of the free charging.

          I'd guess that it's more like 10 years from the start of a tipping point. By then about 20% of the cars will be electric, at that point gas will start to get cheap (with the removal of 20% of the demand), but

          • Only tires, the torque wears out the tire more than ICEV. But you are good on brakes. There are S and X cars with 150K miles on the odo, with just 1/8 inch loss on the brake pads. The regenerative braking does 90 to 99% of the slowing down (when you measure by energy) and the brakes dont wear out at all!

            The tipping point is closer than you think. At present the industry battery price is 140 $/kWh. Tesla is at 120 or 110$ /kWh. The magic number is 90$/kWh at pack level. At that price point, ICEV and BEV wi

          • by mlyle ( 148697 )

            I'd guess that it's more like 10 years from the start of a tipping point. By then about 20% of the cars will be electric, at that point gas will start to get cheap (with the removal of 20% of the demand), but banks and investors will stop financing oil projects (which require lots of money just to keep going). In about 20 years gasoline would be very expensive and pull the rest of the car market into full electric.

            It's more complicated than this. Only about half of oil goes to gasoline. So even if gasoline demand falls significantly, oil itself still won't be a specialty product.

        • by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Sunday February 10, 2019 @06:32PM (#58100996) Journal
          I can afford to pay even 100K for a car. But I wont pay more than 25K for a car. I made an exception for Tesla. There is a huge numbers of camry, accord owners who voluntarily stop at that price point. Give them a compelling reason, they will pay 60K.
    • by Rei ( 128717 ) on Sunday February 10, 2019 @02:56PM (#58100088) Homepage

      Interestingly enough, this story was posted right as the first delivery of Model 3s to China is arriving in Tianjin [vesselfinder.com]. :) Also the second shipment to Europe will also arrive at Zeebrugge shortly [vesselfinder.com].

      • Also the second shipment to Europe will also arrive at Zeebrugge shortly [vesselfinder.com].

        And Musk is in Europe, supervising the Model 3 roll-out in Europe:

        https://electrek.co/2019/02/09... [electrek.co]

  • by Brannon ( 221550 ) on Sunday February 10, 2019 @02:29PM (#58099954)
    ---

    gotta watch the conditionals, folks (Score:3, Insightful)
    by argStyopa ( 232550 ) Alter Relationship on Thursday April 07, 2016 @06:35PM (#51864323) Journal
    "...If it sells every car that's been reserved..."

    I'm going to call it here, that less than 100,000 - maybe even less than 50k - actually turn into real orders.

    --
    -Styopa
    • by mspohr ( 589790 )

      More than 100,000 of the pre-orders have already been delivered. The rest are probably waiting on the $35,000 version.
      There might be a few people who put down $1000 and have no intention of buying but I don't know why they would do that.

    • Give it time man. Tesla will go bankrupt any day now. This is just a brief uptick. I mean their CFO just left 11 days ago. Clearly they'll be bankrupt this month for sure!

  • Make a 50 mile range EV for cheap, and I'd buy two.

    One charges directly through solar (etc) during the day, without the grid tie nonsense.

    The other is for commute etc.

    • What you want... (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      ...is a golf cart.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Why haven't you bought a Leaf then? You can pick up a used 2016 for under $10k.

    • by Rei ( 128717 ) on Sunday February 10, 2019 @02:52PM (#58100074) Homepage

      I agree with the AC above - what you want is a used Leaf.

    • You represent a very tiny market. Further you are unlikely to pay much for what you desire. The market might not serve you.
    • You can pick up some original Leafs in great condition in the $7k to $9k range. Even with degraded batteries they are still good for about 50 miles. And they are great cars as well.

      • It it a realistic proposition to repair the pack?

        • by jrumney ( 197329 )

          It it a realistic proposition to repair the pack?

          Yes, and if you DIY it can be quite worthwhile.

          Here is a guy giving instructions for a Prius [youtube.com], which he picked up cheap because of the dead battery pack, then sold on for a 3K profit after replacing them. The Leaf probably has more batteries, so will cost a bit more, but should still be a similarly easy job.

          • by jrumney ( 197329 )

            which he picked up cheap because of the dead battery pack, then sold on for a 3K profit after replacing them

            Wrong video for the description...but the process is the same.

        • Nissan offers both new and refurbished replacement battery packs. I don't have the exact costs, but the new packs cost in the ballpark of $7k and bring the range up to the 75 ~ 85 mile range. The refurbished packs cost in the ballpark of $3k and bring the range up to about 50 ~ 60 miles--really more of an option if the pack completely fails out of warranty.

          If I were to buy a used Leaf, I would either buy one that looks like it will meet my needs for the next few years, or find one with a battery pack that

  • by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Sunday February 10, 2019 @03:14PM (#58100150) Journal
    The Secret Master Plan [tesla.com] was published in 2006, 13 years ago.

    The entire Tesla enterprise is a bet on a curve. The battery price will halve and the energy density will double every seven years. Sort of a Moore's Law for the batteries. The play book of Tesla is to find which segment of the car/suv market can be attacked at what price batteries. Roadster in 2008. S in 2012. X in 2015. 3 in 2018.

    The auto industry is very mature. Almost all its parts have been refined and optimized over and over for a long time. The prices of components, crankshafts, body panels, differential gears, do not change significantly between the conception, design and production. They conditioned to think like this. "Today battery price is 200 $/kWh. The gasoline power train cost X$. Replacing it with electric would give me Y kWh battery, so... " They are not used to, "battery price to day is 190 $/kWh, four years from now it will 140$/kWh, ...". This is the mistake they made in underestimating Tesla.

    Also the temperament of Elon helped. He kept making impossible to believe claims. So they discounted everything he said. Had he been a staid stiff upper lip CEO, they might have taken him more seriously and started competing with him earlier. 11 years after the Roadster, still there is no electric roadster from any competition with comparable spec. 50 kWh battery, 240 mile range, peppy two seater.

    While the media circus he created kept focusing on his "failures". What he delivered in his "failures" were still stunning ground breaking trail blazing machines.

    The battery era is dawning. It is getting cheaper to store 1 GWh of electricity than to build an gas burning powerplant, in the usa! In deep mines, not having to suck out the diesel exhaust pays for the conversion to battery powered earth movers!

    At the price of 90 $/kWh BEV and ICEV will cost the same off the dealership, for a 300 mile range car. At that price indeterminacy of solar and wind would not be an issue. We are in for a great battery powered future.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Tesla are the Apple for the car world. Expensive, extremely "loyal" fans who can't look at them objectively, and a somewhat dubious guy in charge.

      Of course Tesla deserve a lot of credit, but Nissan pioneered affordable EVs that were actually reliable and make economic sense. Even today you would be crazy to buy a used Tesla without a warranty. Nissan also build a much bigger, more comprehensive charging network in many European countries where Tesla are sparse or non-existent. It's not going to be fun when

      • by steveha ( 103154 ) on Sunday February 10, 2019 @06:08PM (#58100906) Homepage

        The Nissan Leaf is very affordable if you buy one used... because the resale value plummets. A new Leaf is $30K and I can buy a low-mileage 2017 Leaf for $15K. A 2012 Leaf is $8K. For a second car, to be used in local driving, a used Leaf is a great value.

        A Tesla holds its value much better, perhaps partially because Tesla engineered active cooling in the battery pack so charging doesn't cook the cells. Teslas only lose about 1% battery capacity per year and they start with much higher capacities. Plus Tesla has the Supercharger network. A Tesla really can be your only car, even if you need or want to make long road trips.

        Note that the Model 3 costs more than the Leaf and is harder to get. Yet it's still outselling the Leaf. That's customers voting with their money. You may think that Nissan is doing a better job, but the market does not agree with you.

        • It was a big mistake by Nissan to scrimp on active thermal management of the battery. All other car makers benefit from that lesson learned.
        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          Teslas hold their value because Tesla guaranteed the buy-back price, so obviously there is no point selling them for less than that.

          Also Tesla don't do discounts so the purchase price is actually deceptively low. A $100k Tesla costs $100k, where as other manufacturers do big discounts through dealers. A $100k that in reality goes for nearer $75k at the dealer "loses" a lot more value instantly than a Tesla.

      • Tesla are the Apple for the car world. Expensive, extremely "loyal" fans who can't look at them objectively, and a somewhat dubious guy in charge.

        As someone that has a lot of Apple products in his possession I'll say that's probably not too far from the truth.

        Here's a question for you, how does a company "buy" loyalty like that? It comes from something, what is it?

        If you figure out what that "magic ingredient" is then I'm guessing that you will become very wealthy yourself.

      • by Uberbah ( 647458 )

        Expensive, extremely "loyal" fans who can't look at them objectively

        Can say the same thing about those operating under the Hatorade Distortion Field, who rag on Tesla/Apple all day while having no intentions in buying either product. Musk/Zombie Steve aren't holding guns to anyone's heads to force a purchase.

      • Tesla are the Apple for the car world. Expensive, extremely "loyal" fans who can't look at them objectively, and a somewhat dubious guy in charge.

        Except they are well priced within their class, highly rated well beyond fans and received well by all review companies and governments, and ... I agree about the guy in charge but that's not a bad thing. Quite often you *want* someone slightly unhinged to help change the world.

        Drill baby drill.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      The flaw is that battery density isn't going to double every seven years. Not going to happen. You guys were spoiled by transistor technology.
      • by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Sunday February 10, 2019 @06:49PM (#58101062) Journal
        It has already happened. The battery price has fallen by a factor of 16 in the last 28 years. It is expected to continue to fall to 60$/kWh in 2025. All hell will break loose when the price breaks through 90$/kWh automobiles total disruption, and then at 75$/kWh when solar/wind storage makes spot market for electricity vanish. Juicy margins of natural gas burning power plants come from that market. When it crashes through 60 $/kWh, domestic distributed storage will disrupt the utilities. Richer people will disconnect from the grid, and rest of the people still on the grid will face higher charges. More will defect. Utilities will follow the life cycle of bus lines and tram lines. All within the next 12 years.
    • The battery era is dawning. It is getting cheaper to store 1 GWh of electricity than to build an gas burning powerplant in the usa!

      Except a gas burning powerplant actually creates power, the tesla battery pack just stores it... Perhaps if you want to make this example relevant you could factor in the cost of power generation?

      In deep mines, not having to suck out the diesel exhaust pays for the conversion to battery powered earth movers!

      The vast majority of "earth movers" operate above ground, and do not have to "suck out the diesel exhaust".

      Your fringe use case is unconvincing, I don't see an industry migration to battery-powered "earth movers" anytime soon.

      • Kenh, I was like you, very skeptical of batteries till about last year. Once I did the research and studied it, I was convinced. You have a four digit id. You will be convinced too, if you read about it.

        My classmate is the chief engineer in a nuclear waste storage facility deep underground. He just ordered a HVAC system upgrade costing 130 million dollars, to deal with the diesel fumes. For that money you could buy 1 GWh of batteries. Enough to keep 40 Earth movers operating 24/7 with batteries on 8 hour

    • by Anonymous Coward

      The battery... energy density will double every seven years.

      This clearly bullshit 140ManDickhead262Jamuna.
      Otherwise a 2019 Tesla Model S would have double the range of the 2012 Model S.

  • by AlanObject ( 3603453 ) on Sunday February 10, 2019 @03:21PM (#58100184)

    The record.

    • Elon Musk is delusional and an egomaniac.
    • Tesla is out of cash. Will close the doors in six months tops.
    • Telsa's employees are in open revolt.
    • Elon Musk promises but never delivers.
    • Tesla's top executives are bailing.
    • EVs are more polluting than ICE cars anyway.
    • All the big automakers are going to eat Tesla's lunch. Tesla will never scale. And don't get me started on China.
    • Telsa quality control is complete crap worst ever.
    • Tesla cars catch fire all the time why would anyone buy one.
    • All Tesla's investors are suing the company and the SEC is going to put the company in receiverhip.

    Did I miss anything? For the past 4 years I have been reading all the above here on /. over and over and over again posted with absolute conviction any time the topic comes up. Anyone care to update or respond to the list?

    • by alvinrod ( 889928 ) on Sunday February 10, 2019 @04:36PM (#58100500)

      Anyone care to update or respond to the list?

      If they actually bet on those beliefs, they've probably lost their shoes in the stock market and can't afford to comment. But talk is always cheap and there's no end of people who'd like to convince you that they know what they're talking about. Anyone who was all talk is surely talking about something else right now.

      • According to S3 partners, they estimate Tesla shorts have lost 4.4 billion dollars since 2016, including 800 million in stock borrowal fees.

        But they have successfully denied Tesla access to fresh capital, forcing it to fund its expansion using existing operations and cash flow. In some sense it is good for Tesla to get some financial discipline thrust up on it.

        • by inking ( 2869053 )
          The shorts have also lost a lot of money in 2005 and 2006. It is a long minor downside followed by a major upside business.
    • You missed "Tesla makes cars for the 0.001%". You didn't mention it on your list because it is true. A Tesla is a toy for the 0.001% that is used to virtue signal that you "care about the environment". Meanwhile, cars are the very antithesis of being green no matter how they are fueled.
      • Why do you hate success? Or is it envy? I can afford a 100K car, but would not pay more than 25K for a gas car. Along comes Tesla, and I happily give them 55K. Instead of being green with jealousy you should try to learn a few things from us the one percenters.
      • You don't have to be part of the .001% to buy a Tesla. .001% of the US population is approximately 3000 people. Tesla has sold more than 200,000 cars in the USA.

        The average new car costs $25k. A model 3 costs (after rebates) about $35k, so it is not out of reach of ordinary people. Then factor in the lower cost of ownership and it looks like the cost of an average car.

        Just because you are a failure in life and can't afford a Tesla doesn't mean that many ordinary people can't afford one.

    • by Socguy ( 933973 )
      It wasn't more than 6 months ago Tesla was the most shorted stock in history. You wouldn't know it by listening to the talking heads at places like CNBC but the shorts have been quietly tiptoeing to the exits. At this point, short interest in Tesla has basically halved... This means that even the folks who have campaigned against Tesla in the past are no longer willing to put their money were their mouths are...
      • Ihor Dusaniwsky [twitter.com] has been posting the estimated short positions of TSLA (and other stocks) for a long time. Go through his twitter posts of last year. By 2018 Jun 42 million shares of TSLA were shorted. Now the number is 24 million.

        We've only been calcing mark-to-market P\L since 2016 .... 2016-2019 mark-to-market P\L for $TSLA is a $4.66 billion loss which includes $822 million in stock borrow financing costs (an average fee of 3.62% fee for the 3+ years.)

    • Companies do indeed go bankrupt. There are different modes of bankruptcy, and in what they call Chapter 11, the company stays in business, only holders of stock and perhaps some bonds lose all or part of their investment. When a company runs out of money -- they lack the cash on hand to pay their employees, their suppliers demand immediate payment and/or loans come due -- is often hard to tell from the outside looking in when that is going to happen. A company can get by on the credit terms extended to t

      • by shilly ( 142940 )

        As to whether an EV with its need for cobalt and use of electricity from our still-dirty-grid is an improvement on an ICE car of comparable size and drag coefficient is a long discussion

        Why would this need to be a long discussion? It's clear that EVs are an improvement on ICE cars. As you mentioned cobalt and the grid, you clearly are thinking about both CO2e and other factors:
        - CO2e -- grid mix improves over time; the mix is better where EVs are more common eg Norway or CA vs W Va; large power stations are more efficient than small car engines; and numerous full lifecycle analyses have concluded lower CO2e for EV vs ICE
        - Non-CO2e -- particulates much lower; no tailpipes in town; lower noi

        • "numerous full lifecycle analyses have concluded lower CO2e for EV vs ICE"

          My point exactly. There are those numerous analyses weighing in on the EV being greener than the ICE, and there are other analyses, perhaps less numerous, weighing the other way. To consider the different assumptions in these different analyses == long discussion.

          Furthermore, the full life cycle analyses I have seen that favor the EV do not, at this time, favor it overwhelmingly over the ICE. The ICE is also a "moving target"

          • by shilly ( 142940 )

            You started by trying to argue a broad point -- that overall, the environmental case for EVs vs ICE was equivocal, taking into account CO2e and cobalt as examples. Now you are discussing CO2e only, and arguing that this isn't clear when in fact it is. This is a disingenuous thing to do.

            You can find studies arguing the case is equivocal but you can't find *credible* studies arguing this position. That's why there *isn't* a long discussion to be had. The case is, overall, unambiguous, and you're either kiddin

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by ledow ( 319597 )

      Everything above is an opinion, or unfounded.

      Look at facts.

      Tesla sold 250,000 cars worldwide in 2018 (of all different kinds).
      2018 saw 78,700,000 cars sold in 2018.

      Tesla represent 0.3% of the car market last year. And that's *just* last year. Overall, in terms of all the cars in the world, you can add a couple of zeroes after the dot.

      Electric cars, and Teslas in particular, are a teensy, tiny minority of all the cars out there, and a teensy proportion of new sales. You wouldn't know it from all the press

      • by AvitarX ( 172628 )

        Tesla represent 0.3% of the car market last year. And that's *just* last year. Overall, in terms of all the cars in the world, you can add a couple of zeroes after the dot.

        Is your premise that cars last year represent less than 1/100th of cars built?

        That seems incredibly unlikely, and if we say cars on the road, even less likely. How is it possible? Cars are only about 120 years old, and manufacturing has been doing up every year. I'm really confused where you're coming from.

        • by shilly ( 142940 )

          Average car is on the road 8 to 12 years max, so you are clearly right that the OP is talking cack.

          For the UK, there were 31.2m cars in 2017, of which 0.1455% or 45,397 were BEVs (33k in 2016, 25k in 2015, 16k in 2014, 6k in 2013, so the growth is pretty fast and no Model 3 available here yet).

      • And the institutional investors, bean counters, not starry eyed fanbois, own 60% of TSLA, they value it at 50 billion dollars. More than ford or gm. Nearly as much as VW, daimler etc.

        They speak with actual cold hard cash. You write stuff in an obscure corner of the net.

      • Your arguments, although well stated, seem to be resting on one fundamental assumption that is wrong. Tesla is not sitting still. This isn't just a race between the Series 3 and whatever BMW puts up to compete with it.

        Yes the big-3 "could" suddenly decide to take it seriously and start massively investing. That would mean that the Model 3 competitor they come up with won't appear for several years at least. By that time the Series 3 won't be edge-of-the-art.

        Will Ford have something that competes

      • by steveha ( 103154 ) on Sunday February 10, 2019 @10:34PM (#58101832) Homepage

        Electric cars, and Teslas in particular, are a teensy, tiny minority of all the cars out there, and a teensy proportion of new sales.

        Teslas look quite a bit better if you only consider their share of markets Tesla actually is in. The number of cars sold worldwide would include the number of cars sold in India and China where Tesla has no serious business yet.

        I was surprised to read that in the state of California, about 1 in 22 of all cars sold in the third quarter of 2018 were Teslas (actual number: 4.6% of "light vehicle sales"). That's not their share of BEVs, that's their share of all cars sold.

        https://cleantechnica.com/2018/12/02/tesla-4-6-of-california-vehicle-sales-in-q3/ [cleantechnica.com]

        It's true that BEVs are still a tiny slice of the worldwide car market. There was a time when car sales were tiny compared to horse-drawn buggy sales. The past doesn't guarantee the future.

        Musk is a salesman. [...] But the giants can stamp on him any time they like.

        I used to think there was some truth to this idea. Now I scorn it.

        For "the giants" to "stamp on him" they would have to produce so many electric cars that they steal away his customers. One question for you... where will they get the batteries? Have they invested staggering sums of money into their own battery factory, as Tesla did?

        Also, will their cars be just as good as a Tesla? I don't take seriously any car design that doesn't have a front trunk. The new electric cars that just have an electric motor under the hood instead of an ICE engine seem like slap-dash last-minute catch-up designs by companies that aren't ready to compete with Tesla yet.

        It's not that I think the front trunk by itself is that big a deal; the front trunk is the by-product of a clean-sheet new BEV design. Why would you want a complex drive train when you can have a motor right between the two wheels? For all-wheel drive, why would you want anything other than two redundant motors? If a car company hasn't even gotten that far, how competitive can its cars really be to Tesla?

        To hear Musk (and others) speak, you'd think BMW are scrambling to catch up. They're not. They just don't care.

        That's an interesting idea. I doubt you can support it.

        In the "large luxury car" segment of the market, Tesla ate everyone else's lunch. Not that many people will pay $80K or $100K or more for a car, so a Tesla sale is a sale some other company didn't get. Tesla got more sales than BMW or Mercedes or any other luxury maker.

        https://cleantechnica.com/2018/10/01/1-tesla-model-s-dominating-large-luxury-car-sales-in-usa/ [cleantechnica.com]

        If you add up Mercedes S-class sales, and BMW 6-series and 7-series sales, that's roughly the number of cars sold as the Tesla Model S alone.

        The picture looks actually worse when you compare the Tesla Model 3 to its competitors. It's crushing them.

        https://cleantechnica.com/2018/12/08/tesla-model-3-completely-crushing-us-luxury-car-competition-10-cleantechnica-charts/ [cleantechnica.com]

        Are these companies blithely unconcerned about Tesla? Really?

        To hear Musk (and others) speak, you'd think BMW are scrambling to catch up. They're not. They just don't care. Their EV models make them no more than Tesla, which is a drop in the ocean to them. It's chicken-feed to them, in a niche market.

        As I understand Elon Musk's claims: car companies currently make a lot of money off of car repairs; BEVs need less repairs and don't cost very much to repair; car companies have been reluctant to switch to BEVs because they stand to make much less money off of BEVs.

      • by shilly ( 142940 )

        This is just bizarre. We don't live in a world where auto manufacturers are toying with electrification while waiting to see what happens with Tesla. We live in a world where VW has committed $50bn. What, you think its institutional investors are going to sit idly by if VW says "actually we were lying and haven't spent the money as we said we would, it's all some kind of Potemkin village"?

  • by NEDHead ( 1651195 ) on Sunday February 10, 2019 @03:30PM (#58100220)

    Double it 6 times and it will be 120% of the world market!!

  • In as highly fragmented a market as this one, "best seller" seems not to convey much meaningful information.

  • Tesla is selling everything it can shove out the factory door without spending a dime on marketing, unless you count the costs of Elon's tweets. By the end of this year/beginning of next Tesla will have completed another giant factory in Shanghai along with several lines at the Gigafactory in Nevada and will begin pumping out hundreds of thousands, if not millions of model Ys annually. This car will occupy the most popular automotive segment currently, the small SUV/CUV category. This car will be signif
  • Last year any negative story about Tesla immediately got several dozen postings. Then Dec18-Jan19 time frame many Tesla threads appeared and died without even breaking the 50 post mark. Then suddenly today a positive story about Tesla and hundred postings within six hours.

    The click trackers will very quickly spot the trend. I think the click-bait stories in the coming months are going to be positive on Tesla.

  • I wonder what happened to the Chevy Volt or is it off the list because GM is discontinuing it this year. As a plugin hybrid like the Prius Prime, it's a popular car among owner and very reliable too compared to a Tesla.

This restaurant was advertising breakfast any time. So I ordered french toast in the renaissance. - Steven Wright, comedian

Working...