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Tesla stock rallies 9% after car maker reports wider quarterly loss but beats on revenue

Shares of Tesla Inc. rose more than 9% in after-hours trading Wednesday after the Silicon Valley car maker reported mixed second-quarter results and Wall Street appeared to seize on the company’s renewed promises of profitability going forward.

Tesla TSLA, +0.91% said it lost $718 million, or $4.22, in the quarter, compared with $336 million, or $2.04 a share, in the year-ago period.

Adjusted for one-time items, Tesla lost $520 million, or $3.06 a share, compared with $220 million, or $1.33 a share, a year ago. Revenue rose to $4 billion from $2.77 billion a year ago.

Analysts polled by FactSet had expected adjusted earnings of $2.88 a share on sales of $3.99 billion.

Also helping to assuage recent concerns about Tesla, Chief Executive Elon Musk sounded more subdued on the conference call following the results, apologizing directly to each of the two analysts who were cut off in the May conference call, and taking a few questions from reporters.

Tesla’s first-quarter conference call in May is etched in Wall Street’s memory as the one where Musk’s own performance overshadowed discussions about the company, and words such as “boneheaded” entered the lexicon of the usually highly orchestrated post-results call.

At that May event, the CEO interrupted analysts as well as members of his executive team, pivoted to answer numerous questions from a man who runs a YouTube channel mostly dedicated to Tesla, and blamed the press for what he believed to be slanted coverage of autonomous-driving car crashes.

Musk struck a very different tone Wednesday, seeking to assure shareholders that Tesla was on track with Model 3 production goals, that demand for the mass-market sedan was healthy and that the company does not need nor anticipates tapping capital markets in the near future.

Musk and other executives also reiterated that the company will be profitable and cash-flow positive in the second half of the year.

In a letter to shareholders before the call, Tesla said it aims to produce 6,000 Model 3 sedans a week by late August, and also kept intact its target of delivering 100,000 Model S and Model X vehicles this year. Shares ended the regular trading day up 0.9%.

The car maker said it expects to produce 50,000 to 55,000 Model 3 sedans in the third quarter, and vowed to grow the car’s gross margins to 15% in the third quarter and to 20% in the fourth quarter. Capital expenditures will stay below $2.5 billion for the year, compared with $3.4 billion in 2017.

Even by Tesla’s standards, the quarterly report was a closely followed one, coming on the heels of a series of controversies surrounding Musk that have led some investors to question his leadership.

Most recently, hedge fund Greenlight Capital lashed out at Tesla in a letter to investors that became quite personal, saying that Musk “appears erratic and desperate.”

Greenlight founder David Einhorn was said to be “happy” his lease on a Model S had expired and planned to switch to an electric Jaguar.

Tesla’s Wednesday results brought earnings season to a close for major U.S. auto makers.

General Motors Co GM, -2.03% and Ford Motor Co. F, -1.39% reported their second-quarter results last week, with both badly missing Wall Street expectations and mostly blaming their miss on rising raw-material prices and tariffs.

Tesla shares have fallen 5% this year, a contrast with gains of 5% for the S&P 500 index SPX, -0.10% and 2.5% for the Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, -0.32% in the same period. The stock is about 26% off a $385 record high close set on Sept. 18.

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