Monday, January 4, 2016

For the first time in its history, Tesla delivered more than 50,000 cars in one year

For the first time in its history, Tesla delivered more than 50,000 cars in one year

Elon MuskREUTERS/Danny MoloshokTesla CEO Elon Musk.
Tesla just released in fourth-quarter and full-year 2015 delivery numbers.
The automaker sold 17,400 vehicles in Q4: 17,192 were Model S sedans and 208 were Model X SUVs, the company said in a statement.
In 2015, total deliveries were 50,580, the most ever for Elon Musk's electric-car startup, but on the low side of the 50,000-55,000 guidance that the company provided in the middle of last year.
At the beginning of 2015, Musk said that that Tesla would deliver 55,000 vehicles, but the company later trimmed that back. 
In 2014, Tesla managed to build a predicted 35,000 cars, but was unable to deliver them all in the calendar year, with some deliveries slipping into early 2015. 
Deliveries have been a closely watched data point for analysts covering Tesla, as well as much of the media. Musk has consistently said that Tesla doesn't have any issues with demand for its vehicles, but rather is constrained in how many it can produce. 
However, from the CEO's perspective, Tesla needs to come close to consistently meeting expectations on production and delivery targets, to avoid making customers who have put down deposits wait for their cars and assure investors that the company, with a market cap of around $30 billion, can achieve its goal of building 500,000 vehicles annually by 2020.
In the past few weeks, Tesla observers have expressed the expectation that the automaker would make the low end of its guidance.
Tesla provided a modest amount of commentary on the numbers in a short press release:
Q4 Model S deliveries were approximately 48% more than our prior quarterly record and approximately 75% more than Q4 last year. Model X deliveries are in line with the very early stages of our Model X production ramp as we prioritize quality above all else. That ramp has been increasing exponentially, with the daily production rate in the last week of the year tracking to production of 238 Model X vehicles per week. 
There may be small changes to this delivery count (usually well under 1%), as Tesla only counts a delivery if it is transferred to the end customer and all paperwork is correct.
Our vehicle deliveries represent only one measure of our financial performance and should not be relied on as an indicator of our quarterly financial results, which depend on a variety of factors, including the cost of sales, foreign exchange movements and mix of directly leased vehicles.

Italy and Greece are Europe's star pupils

Italy and Greece are Europe's star pupils

Denmark's Prime Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen,Italy's Prime Minister Matteo Renzi and Mexico's President Enrique Pena Nieto attend a meeting to launch the 'Mission Innovation: Accelerating the Clean Energy Revolution' on the opening day of the World Climate Change Conference 2015 (COP21) at Le Bourget, near Paris, France, November 30, 2015. REUTERS/Ian Langsdon/PoolItaly's Prime Minister Matteo Renzi has a good reason to be smiling.
European factories are in great shape.
It's manufacturing PMI day in Europe, meaning we get a snapshot of how factories across Europe are doing.
The figures, each somewhere between 0 and 100, give an idea of whether a country's manufacturing sector is growing or contracting. Anything above 50 signals growth, anything below means contraction.
The picture we've got is of a resurgent European manufacturing sector.
Italy is the star performer, beating forecasts by a long way, and Greece's factories have returned to growth for the first time since May 2014. Germany also beat forecasts, and Spain and France are both holding up pretty well.
The weakest of the bunch? Britain, which posted a pretty big miss. 
Overall, Eurozone manufacturing PMI beat forecasts, coming in at 53.2 against estimates of 53.1.
Here's how it broke down.
  • Spain: 53, down from 53.1 in November;
  • Italy: 55.6, beating forecasts of 55;
  • France: 51.4, down from 51.6 in November;
  • Germany53.2, against forecasts of 53;
  • Greece: 50.2, up from 48.1 in November;
  • UK: 51.9, against forecasts of 52.7.

Oil is going bananas

Oil is going bananas

Oil traders can't make their minds up.
The price of Brent and crude spiked overnight amid escalating tensions between Saudi Arabia and Iran. Saudi Arabia has cut off diplomatic relations with Iran, getting people worried about the supply of oil from the Middle East.
But oil prices fell back dramatically in early-morning trade in London on Monday, even slipping into the red at one point.
Then they bounced back again, before that rally faded. Brent is now up 1.48% at $37.83 (£25.31) at 12.41 p.m. GMT (7.41 a.m. ET) and crude is up 0.82% at $37.34 (£25.29).
Here's Brent:brent oilInvesting.com
And here's crude, the US measure:crude oilInvesting.com

China's manufacturing sector ended 2015 wallowing in the doldrums David Scutt, Business Insider Australia

China's manufacturing sector ended 2015 wallowing in the doldrums

Activity levels across small and medium sized manufacturing firms in China ended 2015 as they began – contracting.
The latest Caixin-Markit manufacturing PMI fell to 48.2 in December, below the 48.6 level of November and expectations for an increase to 49.0.
The reading, the lowest since September, marked the 10th consecutive month that the index remained below the 50 level that separates expansion from contraction.
Caixin china pmi manufacturing Dec 2015Business Insider Australia
Markit reported that production contracted for the seventh time in the past eight months while new orders – a harbinger for future levels of activity – continued to contract on the back of weakening demand, both from within China and abroad.
He Fan, chief economist at Caixin Insight Group, believes the result indicates that the economy is facing a greater risk of weakening further.
The Caixin China General Manufacturing PMI for December is 48.2, down 0.4 points from the reading for November. This shows that the forces driving an economic recovery have encountered obstacles and the economy is facing a greater risk of weakening. More fluctuations in global markets are expected now that the U.S. Federal Reserve has started raising interest rates. The government needs to pay more attention to external risk factors in the short term and fine-tune macroeconomic policies accordingly so the economy does not fall off a cliff. It needs to simultaneously push forward the supply-side reform to release its potential and reap the benefits.
The weak Caixin-Markit PMI report corresponds with an equally weak NBS manufacturing PMI report released by the government on New Year’s Day.
According to the government, activity levels across the nation’s vast manufacturing sector – the largest in the world – contracted for the fifth month in succession in December, the longest stretch of declines seen since the height of the global financial crisis.
The official gauge rose to 49.7, up from 49.6 in November but still below the 50 level that indicates growth in activity levels.
The NBS survey is more widespread than than the Caixin-Markit report, collating responses from large, medium and small firms from both the private and public sectors.
China PMI Dec 2015Business Insider Australia
While the weakness in China’s manufacturing sector is now entrenched, there was more pleasing news to come from the NBS’ separate non-manufacturing PMI report which accelerated to 54.4 in December, the fastest expansion recorded in 18 months.
Should the Caixin-Markit services report for December – scheduled for release on Wednesday – reveal a similar expansion to that recorded in the government’s survey, it will add to evidence that China’s economic rebalancing found further traction in the latter parts of 2015.

Read the original article on Business Insider Australia. Copyright 2016.

China crashed

China crashed

Chinese stocks were obliterated to start the new trading year, falling sharply in the wake of adisappointing manufacturing PMI report for December and further weakening in the Chinese yuan.
After tumbling 5% earlier in the session, triggering circuit breakers that halted trade in stocks for 15 minutes, stocks continued to slide upon the resumption of trade, eventually falling by 7%, freezing markets until the close of trade.
CSI 300 Jan 4 2016Via Business Insider Australia
It was the first session that the new circuit breaker rules were implemented by the Shanghai Stock Exchange, replacing previous limits that prevented markets from rising or falling by a maximum of 10% in one session.
While it may only be a small consolation, at least markets know the circuit breakers work.
The benchmark Shanghai Composite index closed the shortened session down 6.85% while the broader CSI 300 index, encompassing the largest listed firms by market capitalisation in Shanghai and Shenzhen, slid by 6.98%, triggering the market halt.
The small cap CSI 500 index fared even worse, finishing the day down 8.27%.
The decline in Chinese markets was the largest in percentage terms since August 2015, the height of the stock market rout that saw mainland indices near-halve in just two months.
The weakness in Chinese stocks, along with the yuan, contributed to a sharp decline in stocks and higher-yielding currencies across the broader Asian region.
Here’s the Asia scorecard as at 5.10pm AEDT.
Stocks
  • ASX 200 5270.50 , -25.36 , -0.48%
  • Nikkei 225 18450.98 , -582.73 , -3.06%
  • Shanghai Composite 3296.66 , -242.52 , -6.85%
  • Hang Seng 21309.95 , -604.45 , -2.76%
  • KOSPI 1918.76 , -42.55 , -2.17%
  • Straits Times 2836.68 , -46.05 , -1.60%
  • S&P 500 Futures 2020.75 , -14.75 , -0.72%
Forex
  • USD/JPY 119.35 , -0.95 , -0.79%
  • USD/CNY 6.5096 , 0.0175 , 0.27%
  • AUD/USD 0.7212 , -0.0084 , -1.15%
  • NZD/USD 0.6754 , -0.0092 , -1.34%
  • AUD/JPY 86.08 , -1.67 , -1.90%
  • EUR/USD 1.0897 , 0.0039 , 0.36%
  • GBP/USD 1.4738 , -0.0005 , -0.03%
  • USD INDEX 98.399 , -0.2320 , -0.24%
Commodities
  • Gold $1,068.40 , $8.16 , 0.77%
  • Silver $13.92 , $0.13 , 0.94%
  • WTI Futures $37.77 , $0.73 , 1.97%
  • Copper Futures ¥36,280 , -¥460 -1.25%
  • Iron Ore Futures ¥324.50 , ¥0.00 , 0.00%
10-Year Bond Yields
  • Australia 2.820%
  • New Zealand 3.595%
  • Japan 0.255%
  • Germany 0.611%
  • UK 1.963%
  • US 2.241%
Read the original article on Business Insider Australia. Copyright 2016.

Saudi Arabia is severing diplomatic ties with Iran

Saudi Arabia is severing diplomatic ties with Iran

Saudi Arabia Iran TehranREUTERS/Raheb Homavandi/TIMAIranians protest the death of Shiite cleric Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr outside the Saudi Embassy in Tehran.
Saudi Arabia will cut all diplomatic ties with Iran, the Saudi foreign ministry said on Sunday.
Saudi officials said that Iranian diplomats have 48 hours to leave the country, according to CNN.
Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir told a news conference that Riyadh would not allow the Islamic Republic "to undermine" the Sunni kingdom's security, according to Reuters.
He added: "The Iranian regime has a long record of violating foreign diplomatic missions."
The move comes after Iranian protesters attacked the Saudi embassy in Tehran, ransacking and setting fire to the building in retaliation for Saudi Arabia's execution of a prominent Shiite cleric and 46 others on Saturday.
Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr, an outspoken critic of Saudi Arabia's treatment of its Shiite Muslim minority, was executed on charges of inciting domestic terrorism and plotting to overthrow the Saudi government.
One day after the mass execution, the Saudi government released infographics explaining the charges that were made against each individual who had been sentenced to death, including al-Nimr:
Iran protested the grouping of al-Nimr — a cleric in his mid-50s known for his fiery rhetoric — with hardline jihadists who had been executed for their alleged ties to al Qaeda.
"To lump this guy with terrorists is a stretch," Frederic Wehrey, an analyst at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, told The New York Times on Saturday. "To my knowledge, he never called for armed insurrection."
Saudi Arabia, a predominantly Sunni Muslim country, and Iran, which is majority Shiite, are historic regional rivals.
iran saudi arabiaRaheb Homavandi/ReutersIranian protesters chant slogans as they hold pictures of al-Nimr, during a demonstration against his execution in Saudi Arabia, outside the Saudi Arabian Embassy in Tehran on January 3.
The war of words had been heating up before Saudi Arabia's announcement on Sunday, with Iran's supreme leader saying on Saturday that Saudi Arabia would face "divine vengeance" for its execution of al-Nimr, and Saudi officials retorting that Iran had "revealed its true face represented in support for terrorism," The Times reported.
Bobby Ghosh, a former Baghdad correspondent for Time and managing editor of Quartz, told CNN that Saudi Arabia is now "sending a message to the Shia population in the east that they are a minority and they will remain that way."
Saudi embassy IranREUTERS/TIMA/Mehdi Ghasemi/ISNAFlames rise from Saudi Arabia's embassy during a demonstration in Tehran on January 2.
"Saudi Arabia formally breaks diplomatic ties with Iran," geopolitical expert Ian Bremmer, founder of Eurasia Group, noted on Twitter. "And all the Middle East proxy wars just got sharper."
Saudi Arabia and Iran are locked in a proxy war in Syria, where Iran-backed Shiite militias are fighting Saudi-backed Sunni rebels battling to overthrow Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.Iran and Saudi Arabia also support opposing sides in Yemen, where Saudi Arabia has been launching airstrikes against the Iran-backed Houthi rebels since March.

Correction: This article previously misquoted Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir. He did not refer to KSA as the "Sunni kingdom."

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