Tesla CEO Elon Musk: ‘We’re Going to Spend Staggering Amounts of Money in Capex’

Musk aims for an Apple-sized market cap in 10 years.

Tesla Chairman Elon Musk had to launch a rocket today, so the 2014 year-end earnings call for his electric car company was moved forward a few hours. It was a strong quarter -- the company met its target of producing 35,000 vehicles in 2014 and has an outlook for 70 percent growth to 55,000 vehicles in 2015.

Highlights of the quarter included:

Depending on whether you keep score by GAAP or non-GAAP methods, Tesla expects to grow either big or really big. In fact, Chairman Musk, during the week that Apple became the most highly valued company in the history of companies at $700 billion, said, "I mean, if you take this year’s revenue, around $6 billion or thereabouts, and if we are able to maintain a 33 percent growth rate for 10 years and achieve a 10 percent profitability number and have a 20 P/E, our market cap would be basically the same as Apple's is today," adding, "Obviously, getting there requires some significant capex."    

Figure: Model S Margin and Revenue Growth

Source: Tesla Q4 investor letter

The positive outlook for 2015 is helped by the 10,000 Model S orders on the books and 20,000 Model X reservations. Model X development remains on plan for initial customer deliveries starting in Q3. There were a record number of Model S orders in the quarter.

Giga factory

Construction "is proceeding to plan at the Giga factory near Reno, Nevada. Significant steel fabrication of the structure started about two months ago." 

Tesla looks to start its battery pack production in 2016.

China

Recent news (120 cars sold in China last month) and management departures have suggested that Tesla was having some sales trouble in China. Musk said, "This was blown way out of proportion." The Tesla investor letter reports, "Despite initial challenges in China, we remain convinced of the vast potential of this market and are concentrating our efforts on the cities we are in currently, before launching into new cities." Musk said that despite news to the contrary, "It is not difficult to charge your car in China."

There are a total of nine Tesla stores spread across six Chinese cities.

Stationary storage

Musk said that Tesla's consumer battery for homes and businesses will be on the market "fairly soon," adding, "We have the design done."

Musk expects production to begin in six months.

JB Straubel, Tesla's CTO, added that the company is "bidding on lots of stationary storage, talking to lots of utilities," and "getting an increasing amount of attention."

2014 revenue details

Musk suggested that non-GAAP accounting produces a more accurate picture of Tesla's cash flows by recognizing lease income and revenue timing more appropriately. Non-GAAP revenue was $1.1 billion for the quarter, up 44 percent from last year, while GAAP revenue was $957 million.

Regarding GAAP methods, Musk said, "Our financials are better than they appear, not worse."

2015 guidance

A few more tidbits from Chairman Musk