Tesla's U-Turn, Poor Paint, Cancellation Numbers Questioned

 | Aug 27, 2018 02:09AM ET

UBS says the Model 3 Finish is "Below Average". Lawers say u-turn compounds legal issues. And what about production?

The Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) saga continues. Securities lawyers say Musk's U-Turn on Tesla Deal Could Intensify his Legal, Regulatory Woes .

“The SEC will continue its investigation until it’s satisfied that it is on top of the facts,” said Stephen Crimmins, an attorney with Murphy & McGonigle who spent 14 years at the SEC, where he prosecuted hundreds of securities cases.

“What happened on Friday will be of interest to the SEC because it will allow them to probe whether Musk’s pulling back from the go-private somehow indicates that he did not have a reasonable basis for his statement. They will be asking questions of him and others involved in the decision as to why he reversed course.”

Musk said on Friday he believed there was plenty of potential funding to take the company private, but he did not provide any further details to bolster his “funding secured” assertion.

Teresa Goody, CEO of law firm Goody Counsel and a former SEC attorney, said Musk’s statement on Friday appeared to undermine his Aug. 7 tweet that investor support was confirmed.

She also raised concerns about a second comment Musk made on Friday, where he said it had become apparent that compliance restrictions would prevent many of Tesla’s institutional shareholders from holding private Tesla equity.

Both statements are likely to raise further questions among SEC officials as to whether Musk had performed sufficient due diligence to have had a reasonable basis for his Aug. 7 tweets, she said.

Tesla Model 3 Finish is ‘Below Average’

Analysts at UBS found more to fault with Tesla Inc.’s Model 3, saying the electric sedan they scrutinized had "Finish Below Average ", and numerous other quality issues.

Analysts at UBS found more to fault with Tesla Inc.’s Model 3, saying the electric sedan they scrutinized “performed poorly” in terms of finishing quality, sporting missing bolts and uneven welding.

The analysts, led by Colin Langan, have performed a “complete teardown” of a Model 3 alongside engineering partners and last week, in a first note about that process, said Tesla could stand to lose about $6,000 on every cheaper, base-version Model 3 it will sell because the car’s powertrain isn’t as cheap as expected.

This week’s note focused on the car’s finishing versus other mass-market electric vehicles, and said it “stumbles” in comparison with General Motors Co (NYSE:GM). Chevy Bolt and BMW’s i3. The analysts said they found “significant fit & finish issues” with the Model 3 that would be expensive to fix.

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“Our teardown experts noted numerous Model 3 quality issues including inconsistent gaps (and) flushness throughout the car, missing bolts, loose tolerances, and uneven (and) misaligned spot welds,” the analysts said in the note.

As of April, the standard deviation of all gaps and offsets across the entire car had already improved by nearly 40% on average, with particular gap improvements visible in the area of the trunk, rear lamps and rear quarter panel, a Tesla spokesperson said in a statement.

40% Improvement?!

Tesla cites a 40% improvement in April. Questions abound:

Is that an admission cars produced before April were junk? And what about cars produced in the one-of-a-kind tent?

Whoa!

Customer satisfaction scores for the Model 3 have averaged about 90% since January, “with steady improvement through the year, even as the number of cars delivered has rapidly multiplied,” the spokesperson said. If customers are unhappy with their car, “they can either give it back for a full refund, allow us to address any issues, or ask for an entirely new Tesla.”

Whoa. I would like stats on that. Is anyone asking for their money back?

Production Numbers

Teslarti reports Tesla Model 3 VIN registrations rocket past 100k mark as production approaches 6k/week .

Bloomberg's Tesla Tracker reports a similar story but future production is in question. ​