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Musk Floats 10% Tesla Staff Cut Plan as Outlook Darkens

CEO Elon Musk has told Tesla executives to “pause all hiring worldwide”, saying he needs to cut staff at the electric carmaker as a global downturn appears to be looming


Elon Musk and a Tesla EV car
The video, which remains archived on Tesla’s website, touted capabilities like stopping at a red light and accelerating at a green light. Photo: Reuters

 

Tesla CEO Elon Musk has sent an email to his executives asking them to “pause all hiring worldwide,” saying he has a “super bad feeling” about the economy and needs to cut about 10% of jobs at the electric carmaker.

The message sent on Thursday follows remarks Musk has made about the risk of a recession in recent weeks, which is a view shared by other business leaders such as JP Morgan’s Jaime Dimon and Goldman Sachs president John Waldron.

The email came two days after the billionaire told staff to return to the workplace or leave. Tesla employed almost 100,000 people at the company and its subsidiaries at the end of 2021, according to its annual SEC filing.

The company was not immediately available for comment.

Tesla shares fell nearly 3% in US pre-market trade on Friday and its Frankfurt-listed stock was down 3.6% after the report. US Nasdaq futures turned negative and were trading 0.6% lower.

Musk has warned in recent weeks about the risk of a recession, but his email ordering a hiring freeze and staff cuts was the most direct and high-profile message of its kind from the head of an automaker.

 

ALSO SEE: Oz Tech Titan Derides Musk WFH Ban as ‘Out of the 50s’

 

Global Economy Seen Cooling

So far, demand for Tesla cars and other electric vehicles has remained strong and many of the traditional indicators of a downturn, such as increasing dealer inventories and incentives in the United States, have not materialised.

But Tesla has struggled to restart production at its Shanghai factory after Covid-19 lockdowns forced costly outages at the plant.

“Musk’s bad feeling is shared by many people,” said Carsten Brzeski, global head of macroeconomic research at Dutch bank ING. “But we are not talking about global recession. We expect a cooling of the global economy towards the end of the year. The US will cool off, while China and Europe are not going to rebound.”

Musk’s gloomy outlook echoes recent comments from executives including JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon and Goldman Sachs President John Waldron.

A “hurricane is right out there down the road coming our way,” Dimon said this week.

Inflation in the United States is hovering at 40-year highs and has caused a jump in the cost of living for Americans, while the Federal Reserve faces the difficult task of dampening demand enough to curb inflation while not causing a recession.

Musk, the world’s richest man according to Forbes, did not elaborate on the reasons for his “super bad feeling” about the economic outlook in the brief email seen by Reuters.

A number of analysts have cut price targets for Tesla recently, forecasting slower deliveries due to Chinese lockdowns and lost output at its Shanghai plant, a hub supplying electric vehicles to China and for export.

China accounted for just over a third of Tesla’s global deliveries in 2021, according to company disclosures and data released on sales there.

Wedbush Securities analyst Daniel Ives said in a tweet it appeared Musk and Tesla were “trying to be ahead of a slower delivery ramp this year and preserve margins ahead of an economic slowdown.”

 

Reuters

 

Pushback in Germany

Before Musk’s warning, Tesla had about 5,000 job postings on LinkedIn from sales in Tokyo and engineers at its new Berlin gigafactory to deep learning scientists in Palo Alto. It had scheduled an online hiring event for Shanghai on June 9 on its WeChat channel.

Musk’s demand that staff return to the office has already faced pushback in Germany.

“Everyone at Tesla is required to spend a minimum of 40 hours in the office per week,” Musk wrote in his Tuesday email. “If you don’t show up, we will assume you have resigned.”

Musk has referred to the risk of a recession repeatedly in recent comments.

Remotely addressing a conference in mid-May in Miami Beach, Musk said: “I think we are probably in a recession and that recession will get worse.” He added: “It’ll probably be some tough going for, I don’t know, a year, maybe 12 to 18 months, is usually the amount of time that it takes for a correction to happen.”

In late May, when asked by a Twitter user whether the economy was approaching a recession, Musk said: “Yes, but this is actually a good thing. It has been raining money on fools for too long. Some bankruptcies need to happen.”

 

Reuters

 

Musk also engaged on Thursday in a Twitter spat with Australia tech billionaire and Atlassian Plc co-founder Scott Farquhar, who ridiculed the back-to-office directive as “like something out of the 1950s.”

Musk tweeted: “Recessions serve a vital economic cleansing function,” in response to a tweet by Farquhar who encouraged Tesla employees to look into its remote work positions.

Jason Stomel, founder of tech talent agency Cadre, said of the return-to-work directive: “I think there’s potential that this is just a disguised layoff, meaning they’re able to get rid of people with attrition, or without having to actually have a layoff.”

“[Musk] knows there’s a percentage of workers who are just not going to come back,” which he said would be cheaper because no severance would be needed.

 

• Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

 

 

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Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years.

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