Tesla CEO Elon Musk addressed shareholders at the company's annual meeting on Tuesday, predicting the economy would pick up after 12 months and promising the company would deliver production Cybertrucks later this year.
Addressing the long delays to the angular-looking electric pickup truck, Musk lamented some of the manufacturing challenges and said, "Sorry for the delay. We're finally going to start delivering production Cybertrucks later this year." He said it would be the vehicle he drives on a daily basis.
Musk also said that he expects a challenging economic environment to persist for the next twelve months, and that many companies will go bankrupt. But after that, he believes, the economy will recover and Tesla will be well-positioned.
He also predicted that the Tesla Model Y would be "the number one best-selling car on Earth this year."
During the Q&A session, an attendee dressed like a robot with a cowboy hat, asked Musk if Tesla would build an RV or a camper. Musk said the company doesn't plan to build an RV at this time, but that the forthcoming Cybertruck could be converted into an RV or a camper.
Responding to a question about his $44 billion takeover of social media service Twitter, Musk said it was a "short-term distraction" and said he had to do some "major open-heart surgery" to ensure its survival, then noted that he was excited to have former NBC Universal advertising executive Linda Yaccarino joining the company to become its new CEO.
Straubel added to board, new drive train touted
Earlier, shareholders voted to add former Tesla CTO JB Straubel, who is now the CEO of Redwood Materials, to the automaker's board of directors. Redwood Materials recycles electronic waste and batteries, and last year struck a multi-billion dollar deal with Tesla supplier Panasonic.
After the shareholder vote, CEO Elon Musk kicked off his portion of the meeting with a commitment to conduct a third-party audit of Tesla's cobalt supply chain, namely to ensure there is no child labor within any of Tesla's cobalt suppliers.
Cobalt is a critical ingredient for production of batteries that go into Tesla's electric cars and backup battery packs used at homes and for utility-scale energy projects. "Even for the small amount of cobalt that we do us, we will make sure six weeks til Sunday that no child labor is being exploited," Musk said to the cheers of investors in attendance in person.
Musk also announced that Tesla plans to produce a new kind of drive unit, which he said will require less silicon carbide than prior drive trains, and no rare earth elements. He added that Tesla will also switch to a new, low voltage architecture in its cars which should require less copper.
Later in his presentation, Musk boasted about the company's energy storage business and said growth in the sales of "big batteries" was faster than growth in the company's core automotive segment.
Distraction concerns
Since the electric vehicle maker's last annual meeting in August 2022, Tesla's largest retail shareholder, Leo Koguan, has criticized Musk for selling billions of dollars worth of his Tesla holdings to finance a $44 billion buyout of Twitter, the social media company.
Koguan, who is a billionaire and founder of the IT services firm SHI International, called for the company's board to "perform shock therapy to resuscitate stock price," namely by way of a share buyback late last year.
Some institutional Tesla investors have admonished Musk for being too distracted with his new role as Twitter CEO to perform optimally at the helm of Tesla, but Musk said on Tuesday that he expected to spend less time on Twitter going forward than he has in the last six months. They have also criticized the Tesla board, led by chairwoman Robyn Denholm, for failing to rein him in and protect shareholders' interests.
Shares in Tesla closed at $228.52 on October 28, 2022, after Musk officially took over Twitter. They closed at $166.52 on May 16, 2023, as the meeting kicked off.
At last year's shareholders meeting, Musk predicted an 18-month recession, teased the possibility of share buybacks, and told investors that electric vehicle business was aiming to produce 20 million vehicles annually by 2030, which he thought would require a dozen factories total with each one producing 1.5 million to 2 million units per year.
This is a developing story, please check back for updates.
Disclosure: NBCUniversal is the parent company of CNBC.
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