Tesla CEO Elon Musk Calls Out Panasonic on Twitter
Blames battery supplier for Model 3 production constraints
Elon Musk has engaged in Twitter spats with a long line of folks, from rival automakers to short sellers and the Securities and Exchange Commission.
He's at it again, but this time the stakes could be even higher. He's in a rare public dispute with a critical supplier: Panasonic Corp., the company that makes all of the lithium-ion battery cells that power Tesla Inc. 's electric vehicles.
The rift started with reports the companies are tempering expansion plans at their jointly operated battery plant near Reno, Nevada. Musk shot back in tweets that Panasonic is the culprit by operating at a pace that's constrained production of Tesla's Model 3 sedan.
Even by Musk's standards, it's highly unusual for a company and its largest supplier to duel so openly. And the tiff once again raises questions about Tesla's ability to sustain profitability amid concerns about demand. Tesla delivered just 63,000 cars globally in the first quarter, compared with almost 91,000 in the previous three months. Panasonic's apparent reluctance to boost battery production only adds to the skepticism -- and it may portend greater troubles.
"Tesla and Panasonic need couples counseling ASAP," said Craig Irwin, an analyst at Roth Capital Partners. "This is looking like a much more acrimonious relationship."
Tesla shares fell 1.9 percent to $268.12 shortly after the open of regular trading Monday. The stock has slumped 19 percent this year.
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Odd Couple
Tesla and Panasonic have been joined at the hip since the gigafactory agreement was first announced in July 2014, even if on paper they're a bit of an odd couple. One is a 16-year-old maker of electric vehicles run by an impetuous boss, the other a century-old conservative Japanese manufacturer.
Tesla manages the gigafactory but Panasonic is the principal partner, responsible for churning out cylindrical lithium-ion battery cells that Tesla buys and then packages into battery packs for the Model 3 sedan. The goal was to produce 35 gigawatt hours, or GWh, of cells per year by 2020, enough for roughly 400,000 Model 3s.
But two weeks ago, Osaka-based Panasonic shocked the investment community when the Nikkei newspaper reported that Tesla and Panasonic were freezing plans to expand capacity beyond the initial 35GWh amid concerns about Tesla's sales.
"Panasonic is a 101-year-old company," said Chris Redl, senior portfolio manager at Gordian Capital Japan. "It's extremely rare for a Japanese company to publicly air its grievances about a top customer via a story in the Nikkei."

