Elon Musk says the carmaker is in talksĀ about licensing its driving system to a major manufacturer.
(Bloomberg) — Elon Musk sighed and snickered during Tesla Inc.ās latest earnings call, then letĀ loose a familiar prediction.
āI know Iām the boy who cried FSD,ā he said, referring to the feature Tesla has marketed as Full Self-Driving. āBut man, I think weāll be better than human by the end of this year.ā
The chief executive officerās chuckle and self-deprecation were nods to the fact Musk has been saying for a decadeĀ that Teslas are on the verge of driving autonomously. āIāve been wrong in the past,ā he said. āI may be wrong this time.ā
ThoseĀ caveats are meaningful for Tesla shareholders, considering the emphasis the CEO is increasingly putting on autonomy over business fundamentals. He downplayed the significance of the companyās shrinking profit margins, callingĀ the trends minor compared to what will happen when its carsĀ are able to upload self-driving capability.
Another prediction Musk has made before āĀ that the upload will augur āthe single biggest step-change in asset value, maybe in historyā ā apparently wasnāt convincing. Tesla shares sank 9.7% on Thursday, costing the company about $90 billion in market capitalization.
There was one element of Muskās autonomy messaging that analysts did like: the notion that Tesla is having early discussions with a major manufacturer about licensing FSD, which until now only about 400,000Ā of the companyās customers have had access to.
Potentially licensing FSD āwould represent an important change of scopeā in Teslaās total addressable market, Morgan StanleyāsĀ Adam Jonas said in a note. It ācould be a significant part of Teslaās long-term investment thesis,ā wrote Tom Narayan of RBC Capital Markets.
Neither analyst mentioned in their reports that Musk has made similar comments aboutĀ licensing talks before. During a quarterly earnings call in January 2021, he said Tesla hadĀ preliminary discussions about offering Autopilot āĀ the companyās standard-equipment driving system āĀ to other manufacturers.
Those talks apparently didnāt go anywhere, asĀ no automaker has paidĀ Tesla to license Autopilot.
A licensing deal withĀ a competitorĀ seems more plausible nowĀ than it did just a few months ago. One of the reasons Teslaās stock has still more than doubled this year āĀ even after Thursdayās rout āĀ is the traction its charging connector has been getting in North America. Ford Motor Co., General Motors Co. and half a dozen other automakers have adopted the design Tesla is trying to make an industry standard.
But while Musk evoked those developments on this weekās earnings call, he also drew a distinction. Whereas Tesla would want to charge others to use the driving system, the company made theĀ design and specifications of its connectors and ports openly available in November and invited carmakers and charging-network operators to use them.
Convincing another manufacturerĀ to pay for FSD āĀ a feature Tesla recalled early this year, under pressure from the US National Highway Traffic Safety Administration āĀ would be a much taller task.Ā
āThere will be a very high bar for FSD to be proven out to a legacy OEM,ā Evercore ISI analyst Chris McNally wrote in a report. āFSDās yet-to-be-proven AV software path is NOT the same thing as the highly visible, extensively used, existing physical Supercharger network.ā
McNally isnāt alone in his caution.
āWe are miles from being a true believer in the technology,ā Needham analystĀ Chris Pierce wrote,Ā āputting us in the company of the majority of institutional investors that we speak with.ā
More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com
Ā©2023 Bloomberg L.P.