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6 Critical Takeaways From Tesla's Earnings

Electric-car maker Tesla, Inc. (NASDAQ: TSLA) reported third-quarter 2017 earnings after the market closed on Wednesday that largely disappointed investors.

Shares of Tesla dropped 6.8% on Thursday. We can attribute the decline to the company posting an earnings loss considerably wider than Wall Street was expecting and concerns over the delay in reaching the Model 3 production target of 5,000 vehicles per week. News out during the trading day that House Republicans want to abolish the electric-car tax credit was probably another factor in the stock's decline.

Tesla stock is still up 43.2% in 2017, and nearly 63% for the one-year period through Friday. By comparison, the S&P 500 has returned 17.5% and 25.9%, respectively, over the same periods.

Here are six things you should know about Tesla's Q3 report and outlook:

Side view of a black Model 3 driving on road with fall greenery in background.
Side view of a black Model 3 driving on road with fall greenery in background.

Model 3. Image source: Tesla.

Key quarterly numbers

Metric

Q3 2017

Q3 2016

Change (YOY)

Revenue

$2.98 billion

$2.30 billion

30%

Net income

($619.4 million)

$21.9 million

($641.3 million)

GAAP* Earnings per share (EPS)

($3.70)

$0.14

($3.84)

Adjusted EPS

($2.92)

$0.71

($3.63)

Vehicle deliveries

26,137

24,821

5%

Data source: Tesla. GAAP = generally accepted accounting principles.

Of the 26,137 vehicles delivered, 25,915 were Model S and Model X vehicles and 222 were Model 3s. Combined Model S and Model X deliveries grew 4.5% over the year-ago quarter.

The launch of the Model 3 -- the company's first car aimed at the mass market – is the reason all the profitability numbers are much worse than in the year-ago quarter. The vehicle began shipping in small quantities in July.

Wall Street was looking for Tesla to post an adjusted loss of $2.30 per share on revenue of $2.94 billion. So Tesla met revenue expectations, but its loss was much wider than analysts expected.

Tesla used $300.6 million of cash in operations, driven by capital expenditures for the Model 3 launch and Gigafactory 1 in Nevada. By comparison, the company generated an operating cash flow of $423.6 million in the year-ago quarter. It ended the quarter with $3.5 billion of cash on hand.

Model 3 production goal of 5,000 vehicles per week pushed back a quarter

We knew going into earnings that Model 3 production was behind schedule, as Tesla shared Q3 vehicle production numbers in October. So it didn't come as much surprise that Tesla pushed back the timeline for achieving a production rate of 5,000 Model 3s per week. The company now expects to reach this milestone by late Q1 2018, rather than by December, as CEO Elon Musk said during the summer. The primary culprit is a bottleneck in battery module assembly at the Gigafactory 1 in Nevada, which the company has been feverishly working to address.