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Tesla Readies Production Boost, Flags Return to Hiring Mode

(Bloomberg) -- Tesla Inc. is poised to increase production at its California car plant and is back in hiring mode, according to an internal email sent days after the company wrapped up a record quarter of deliveries.The electric-car maker is “making preparations” to raise output at its factory in Fremont, California, Jerome Guillen, Tesla’s automotive president, wrote Tuesday. “While we can’t be too specific in this email, I know you will be delighted with the upcoming developments.”After several rounds of job cuts announced by Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk over the past year, Guillen also told employees that Tesla is hiring. “As we continue to ramp up production, please tell your friends and neighbors that we have lots of exciting new positions open, both in Fremont and at Giga,” he wrote, referring to the company’s battery factory near Reno, Nevada.Tesla’s shares rose as much as 2.2% to $235.10 as of 9:40 a.m. Wednesday in New York. A copy of the email was seen by Bloomberg, and a Tesla spokeswoman didn’t immediately respond to a voicemail or email seeking comment.The plan to boost production is a show of confidence by Tesla in the sustainability of demand for the Model 3, which paced the company’s record 95,200 deliveries in the second quarter. The sedan is helping Musk, 48, overcome flagging sales of the Model S, which went into production in 2012, and the Model X, which started output in 2015.Musk this week tamped down speculation that “refreshed” versions of the Model S and X are coming soon, saying the vehicles will get “only a series of minor ongoing changes.” Tesla delivered a total of just 17,650 Model S sedans and Model X crossovers in the second quarter, down 21% from the year-earlier period.Tesla’s shares had plunged 31% this year through Tuesday’s close. The rout has been fueled by disappointing first-quarter deliveries and concern that the cheaper Model 3 is cannibalizing sales from the higher-margin Model S and X, preventing the company from earnings profits.Upbeat MemoBut just as Musk has been adamant that demand isn’t a problem for Tesla, Guillen’s letter to employees is upbeat. He wrote that the company “hit new records in all production lines for output and efficiency” in the most recent quarter -- both at the California and Nevada plants -- and that “quality is also reaching record highs.”Tesla has said it plans to produce “significantly” more than the 360,000 to 400,000 vehicles the company expects to deliver in 2019. Output may reach 500,000 vehicles worldwide this year if its factory near Shanghai can reach “volume production” early in the fourth quarter, the company told shareholders in April.Guillen wrote in his newsletter that several portions of the Shanghai plant are falling into place.“The Stamping, Body, Paint, and General Assembly lines in China are well underway and hitting records in both line design and fabrication,” he said.Hiring, LeaksGuillen’s note urging employees to put the word out that Tesla is hiring may have come as a bit of a surprise. Musk announced...

(Bloomberg) — Tesla Inc. is poised to increase production at its California car plant and is back in hiring mode, according to an internal email sent days after the company wrapped up a record quarter of deliveries.

The electric-car maker is “making preparations” to raise output at its factory in Fremont, California, Jerome Guillen, Tesla’s automotive president, wrote Tuesday. “While we can’t be too specific in this email, I know you will be delighted with the upcoming developments.”

After several rounds of job cuts announced by Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk over the past year, Guillen also told employees that Tesla is hiring. “As we continue to ramp up production, please tell your friends and neighbors that we have lots of exciting new positions open, both in Fremont and at Giga,” he wrote, referring to the company’s battery factory near Reno, Nevada.

Tesla’s shares rose as much as 2.2% to $235.10 as of 9:40 a.m. Wednesday in New York. A copy of the email was seen by Bloomberg, and a Tesla spokeswoman didn’t immediately respond to a voicemail or email seeking comment.

The plan to boost production is a show of confidence by Tesla in the sustainability of demand for the Model 3, which paced the company’s record 95,200 deliveries in the second quarter. The sedan is helping Musk, 48, overcome flagging sales of the Model S, which went into production in 2012, and the Model X, which started output in 2015.

Musk this week tamped down speculation that “refreshed” versions of the Model S and X are coming soon, saying the vehicles will get “only a series of minor ongoing changes.” Tesla delivered a total of just 17,650 Model S sedans and Model X crossovers in the second quarter, down 21% from the year-earlier period.

Tesla’s shares had plunged 31% this year through Tuesday’s close. The rout has been fueled by disappointing first-quarter deliveries and concern that the cheaper Model 3 is cannibalizing sales from the higher-margin Model S and X, preventing the company from earnings profits.

Upbeat Memo

But just as Musk has been adamant that demand isn’t a problem for Tesla, Guillen’s letter to employees is upbeat. He wrote that the company “hit new records in all production lines for output and efficiency” in the most recent quarter — both at the California and Nevada plants — and that “quality is also reaching record highs.”

Tesla has said it plans to produce “significantly” more than the 360,000 to 400,000 vehicles the company expects to deliver in 2019. Output may reach 500,000 vehicles worldwide this year if its factory near Shanghai can reach “volume production” early in the fourth quarter, the company told shareholders in April.

Guillen wrote in his newsletter that several portions of the Shanghai plant are falling into place.

“The Stamping, Body, Paint, and General Assembly lines in China are well underway and hitting records in both line design and fabrication,” he said.

Hiring, Leaks

Guillen’s note urging employees to put the word out that Tesla is hiring may have come as a bit of a surprise. Musk announced plans to reduce headcount by about 7% in January and 9% in June 2018.

But while the newsletter doesn’t make mention of it, Tesla does have a new model in the works that may bring about need for more workers. Musk said last month that the company is likely to produce the Model Y — a crossover smaller than the Model X — in Fremont.

Guillen ended his newsletter with a reminder to employees that they should refrain from leaking internal communications to the public.

“Do not share company information through email, Instagram, Facebook or Twitter. Leave that to Elon!” he wrote. “Once that information is public, feel free [to] retweet your heart out, share on IG or FB.”

(Updates share move in fourth paragraph.)

To contact the reporter on this story: Josh Eidelson in Washington at [email protected]

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Craig Trudell at [email protected], ;Young-Sam Cho at [email protected], ;Tom Giles at [email protected], David Welch

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