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Tesla Earnings Calls 2013-2015

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Tesla Earnings Calls 2013-2015

  • Event / format: Tesla’s quarterly earnings calls across 2013-2015 — twelve calls (2013 Q1-Q4, 2014 Q1-Q4, 2015 Q1-Q4), reported from May 2013 through February 2016. This is the era that runs from the Model S ramp and first profitable quarter, through the Gigafactory announcement and the introduction of Autopilot, to the Model X launch and its “production hell.” Each call is a multi-speaker investor event: an IR host (Jeff Evanson) opens, Elon Musk (Chairman & CEO), Deepak Ahuja (CFO, through 2015 Q3) and — from 2014 on — JB Straubel (CTO) present and answer, and sell-side analysts ask the questions.
  • Era arc: if 2010-2012 was survival and first profit, 2013-2015 is the era in which the durable Tesla worldview gets its second-decade shape: the Gigafactory is conceived live on the Q3 2013 call (“there’s going to need to be some kind of gigafactory”); the “machine that makes the machine” is stated for the first time as a manufacturing thesis (Q3 2013 → Q2/Q3 2014); Autopilot appears and Musk begins putting dated full-autonomy predictions on the record (7-10 years in 2014 → “15 to 20 year time frame, and for Tesla a lot sooner” in 2015); and the era closes on a rare, explicit self-criticism — the Model X had “too many great things all at once,” “some hubris there with the X” — that he says reshaped how he will de-risk the Model 3. The mind-material is the cluster of mental models that first take their mature form here and then recur for the next decade.
  • Trust tier: verified. Each raw is a full stockanalysis.com transcript (verified: true). The 2015 Q1 and Q2 transcripts carry explicit Elon Musk -- Chairman and CEO speaker labels; the other ten calls are un-labeled (turns run as bare paragraphs), so on those Musk is attributed by unambiguous first-person tells, characteristic phrasing, and Q&A-answer position (the CEO answers strategy/vision; the CFO’s hand-offs — “Deepak here,” “anything to add?” — and JB Straubel’s tech turns are visibly distinct). Only Musk’s words are quoted — none of Ahuja’s CFO turns, Straubel’s CTO turns, or the analysts’ questions.
  • Quote citation (per-quarter anchor convention): every block quote below is byte-accurate to its own quarter’s raw transcript (the authoritative gate), and is anchored to that quarter’s stockanalysis.com transcript page with a #:~:text= fragment. Each fragment is apostrophe-free (,%2C, -%2D) and its decoded snippet is a verbatim substring of the quote; stockanalysis.com hydrates the transcript body client-side, so a live in-browser highlight may not always resolve — the guarantee is the verbatim-substring match against the raw, and each link points to the correct quarter (cross-quarter confusion across the twelve transcripts is the chief risk this page guards against). NOT the raw file path.

Summary

The 2013-2015 earnings calls are where several of the wiki’s load-bearing Musk mental models acquire the form they keep for the next ten years. Most of each call is financials, guidance, and production detail — kept in prose or omitted. What survives as mind-material is a tight set of recurring beliefs, and — crucially for an era page — the motion in them across twelve dated datapoints.

Three threads show genuine evolution. (1) The “machine that makes the machine” is born as a phrase about the Gigafactory (“a factory is the machine that builds the machine,” Q3 2013) and hardens into the era’s signature manufacturing thesis — “it is way harder to make the machine that makes the machine than it is to make the machine in the 1st place” (Q3 2014) — the belief that production, not design, is the hard problem. (2) The autonomy timeline appears for the first time as a dated forecast and then sharpens quarter by quarter: “no sooner than 7 years … could be up to 10” (Q3 2014) → “all cars will go fully autonomous … 15 to 20 year time frame. And for Tesla, it will be a lot sooner” with the “owning a horse” metaphor (Q3 2015) → the “Autopilot in a plane” driver-attention framing and the decision to “create our own data set for driving” (Q2 2015). (3) The era closes on the clearest evolution-of-thinking marker of all: Musk’s mea culpa that the Model X had “too many great things all at once,” “some hubris there with the X,” and his resolve to not be “super crazy with the design of the initial version of the 3” (Q4 2014 / Q4 2015) — a documented self-correction in his risk-taking.

The era also shows strong continuity. The first-principles instinct runs throughout: the reject-rate-“in the limit” reasoning on cell size (Q2 2013), the fuel-cell “best case … cannot beat the current case electric car … Success is not one of the possible outcomes” argument and “hydrogen is an energy carrier not an energy source” (Q2 2014), the terawatt-hour macro-energy calculation (Q1 2015), the stationary-storage buffering argument that you could “shut down half of the world’s power plants” (Q2 2015), and the empiricist’s demand “Don’t send us PowerPoint … send us one cell that works” (Q3 2014). The mission is restated as catalyst (“I really do encourage other manufacturers,” Q2 2013; “since creating the company,” Q3 2014) and urgency (“reduce the probability of a catastrophe,” Q2 2014). The in-sourcing conviction continues (“when we’ve in sourced something, it got cheaper,” Q2 2014; “build value by doing hard things, not outsourcing,” Q3 2015). And a thread the era makes its own — production as the least-lucky supplier — is stated three times across 2015, his clearest articulation of how he reasons about complex systems.

Tone note: the wiki reports these as Musk’s stated views and forecasts at 2013-2015 datapoints, without adjudication. Several are dated, falsifiable predictions (the “$35,000 … 200 mile range” Gen-3 car; “half a million cars in 2020”; the 7-10-year and 15-20-year autonomy timelines; the Apple-market-cap back-of-envelope) — recorded as stated forecasts and confidence postures, neither endorsed nor rebutted, useful precisely as optimism-and-timeline datapoints. The Apple-scale “I bet that they do occur … that’s just my personal opinion” framing and the financial guidance itself are kept in prose, never block-quoted as fact.

Key quotes (verbatim, per-quarter transcript-anchored — Elon Musk only)

The Gigafactory and “the machine that makes the machine” (2013-2014)

The era’s single richest evolution thread. The Gigafactory concept is reasoned into existence live on the Q3 2013 call — the third-generation car needs cell volume that doesn’t exist in the world, so a new kind of factory must be built:

“I mean, there’s going to need to be some kind of gigafactory”

In the same call the factory itself is reframed as a product with versions — the earliest spoken form of his “the factory is the machine that builds the machine” mental model:

“It’s like a version of the factory. So we’re trying to figure out what’s the right way to do version 1 of this Gigafactory.”

By Q2 2014 the idea is the explicit case for building custom equipment rather than buying it — designing the machine that makes the machine:

“you really get to design the machine that makes the machine, not just do so with off the shelf equipment. So just everything about it is going to get a whole lot better.”

And by Q3 2014 it has hardened into the era’s defining thesis — production is harder than design — the belief that recurs for the next decade:

“it is way harder to make the machine that makes the machine than it is to make the machine in the 1st place. Like the production of the car is way harder than actually I’d say the design of the car.”

Autopilot and the autonomy timeline — the prediction sharpens (2014-2015)

The clearest dated evolution in the era. The first concrete full-autonomy timeline Musk puts on the record (Q3 2014) is cautious and regulator-bounded:

“it’s probably no sooner than 7 years from now and could be up to 10, I think.”

paired with the confidence that Tesla will lead it:

“but I think it’s quite likely that Tesla will be the leader in making cars like that.”

By Q2 2015, with Autopilot about to ship, two design beliefs appear: the own-the-data-set strategy —

“It looks like we don’t really have much choice but to create our own data set for driving, in order to in the long term, in order to provide a high-quality Autopilot experience.”

and the aviation-Autopilot driver-attention analogy that frames responsibility at launch (a view that shifts markedly in later years):

“We do wanna set the expectation that it’s much like the Autopilot in a plane where you turn the Autopilot on in a plane, but there’s still an expectation that the pilot will pay attention to what the plane is doing, and, you know, won’t sort of go to sleep or just disappear from the cockpit.”

By Q3 2015 the timeline is restated industry-wide and the conviction is absolute — non-autonomous cars will be like owning a horse:

“Well, I’m actually on record of saying that I think that all cars will go fully autonomous in long term. I think it will be quite unusual to see cars that don’t have full autonomy, let’s say, in for new car production in the 15 to 20 year time frame. And for Tesla, it will be a lot sooner than that.”

“any cars that are being made that don’t have full autonomy full autonomy will have negative value. It will be like owning a horse.”

“There was some hubris there with the X” — an evolution-of-thinking marker (2014-2015)

The era’s most candid self-correction, and its clearest documented shift. By Q4 2014 Musk has already resolved to restrain himself on the Model 3, having watched the X get away from him:

“there are things that we could do with the Model 3 platform that are really adventurous, but would put the schedule at risk. So what we’re going to do is we’re going to have something that it’s going to be an amazing car, but it won’t be the most adventurous version of the Model 3 to begin with.”

“We’ve got quite adventurous with the X And we don’t want to be that would be too risky given the Gigafactory and everything sort of has to happen on time. We don’t we’re not going to go super crazy with the design of the initial version of the 3.”

By Q4 2015, with the X finally launched, he names the lesson outright — a rare admission of hubris:

“I think the mistake we made with the Model X, which I really think we’ve taken to heart at Tesla, is that we put too many new features and technologies, too many great things all at once into product. In retrospect, it would have been a better decision to do fewer things with the first version of Model X and then roll in the capabilities and features on new technologies over time in subsequent years. So I do think that there was some hubris there with the X.”

Production as the least-lucky supplier (2015)

The era makes one production mental model its own, stating it three times across 2015 — a complex system moves only as fast as its unluckiest part. First in Q1 2015:

“the production ramp goes according to the unluckiest and worst-performing supplier or product of Tesla.”

In Q2 2015, the fullest articulation — the “thousandth least lucky and slowest”:

“The pace of progress is really dependent on which supplier is the slowest and least lucky. You know, if a supplier has unexpected challenges, which can range from force majeure to somebody having to redo a design because the initial design was wrong, when you have a complex product like the Model S with thousands of suppliers, you can say that the pace of progress is determined by the thousandth least lucky and slowest.”

Restated in Q3 2015, confirming it as a stable framework:

“the production will move as fast as the least lucky supplier that we have in our network.”

First-principles: reduce it to the physics (2013-2015)

The era is dense with first-principles reasoning. On cell form factor (Q2 2013), the optimum is found by taking the variable to its extreme — reasoning “in the limit”:

“So I say in the limit where the battery where the whole battery is 1 cell, the reject rate would be virtually 100%. And then as you make the cell smaller and smaller, the reject rate will reduce.”

On hydrogen (Q2 2014), two moves: the best-case comparison that forecloses the whole idea, and the physics distinction between a carrier and a source:

“if you take a theoretically optimal fuel cells car and compare that to a current in production battery electric car on key metrics of mass, volume, complexity, cost, refueling infrastructure, it’s just it’s a loss. So if the best case in our opinion, the best case fuel cell car and obviously the current fuel cell cars are far from best case, cannot beat the current case electric car, well, why even try? That just makes no sense. Success is not one of the possible outcomes.”

“hydrogen is an energy carrier not an energy source. So you have to create the hydrogen, which is really inefficient because you either have to crack a hydrocarbon or electrolyze water.”

On cost (Q1 2014), the value-preserving reduction — get the molecules in the right shape, never strip value:

“we don’t do any cost down if it makes the product worse. So that doesn’t really gain us anything, which is quite tempting to do that sometimes and that drives me crazy when companies in other ultimately in the car industry or in other industries reduce cost by reducing value. That’s not a good thing. So our cost reductions are really aimed at figuring out how to get the molecules in the right shape in a smarter way, as opposed to trying to sort of strip value out.”

And the empiricist’s filter — demonstrated reality over claims (Q3 2014):

“please send us a sample cell, okay? Don’t send us PowerPoint, okay? Just send us one cell that works with all appropriate caveats, that would be great. That’s really that sorts out the nonsense and the claims that aren’t actually”

The same physics-first habit applied to the whole energy transition (Q1 2015) and to stationary storage (Q2 2015) — the buffering argument decoupled from renewables:

“Assume full electrification of transport, electrification of all heating and cooling, and then the current, you know, industrial and commercial uses of electricity, like basically to go fully electric, transport is about half the size of everything else. That was sort of our global macro calculations. Ultimately we think things will get there.”

“If you have buffering, which is what stationary storage allows for, then you only need your power plants to operate at the average energy usage, which means that you can basically, in principle, shut down half of the world’s power plants if you had stationary storage. This is independent of renewable energy.”

Vertical integration — in-sourcing makes it cheaper (2014-2015)

The in-sourcing conviction continues from the prior era, now with the molecular-distance argument (Q2 2014):

“I don’t think outsourcing decreases the cost and that tends to increase the cost in our experience. It’s just like the reason we don’t the reason we outsource stuff is just because we get too many fish to fry otherwise. But it’s almost always the case that we’ve when we’ve in sourced something, it got cheaper.”

And, by Q3 2015, the deeper rationale — value accrues to whoever does the hard thing:

“we also believe that companies build values build value by doing hard things, not outsourcing those hard things to other people because then they deserve the value.”

The mission — catalyst, urgency, and S/X funding the Model 3 (2013-2015)

The mission is restated as catalyst — accelerate everyone’s EVs, not just Tesla’s (Q2 2013):

“I really do encourage other manufacturers to bring electric cars to market because it’s a good thing and they need to bring it to market and then keep iterating and improving and making better and better electric cars and that’s what’s going to result in us in humanity achieving a sustainable transport future. Kind of wish it was going faster than it is.”

as urgency tied to existential stakes (Q2 2014):

“we’re trying to make it go there as fast as possible because time is important here. The sooner this can be done, the sooner we can reduce carbon output and reduce the probability of a catastrophe.”

as the founding purpose (Q3 2014):

“Our goal is to accelerate the advent of electric vehicles. In order to do that, we need to make a lot of cars. And then we’re also sort of happy over time to support other manufacturers in making electric vehicles. And we’re in pursuit of that objective and have been since creating the company.”

as inevitability (Q2 2015):

“our view is that the whole industry will go electric. Eventually, they really won’t have much choice. The sooner they go electric, the better.”

and — closing the era — as the master-plan funding logic, the premium cars paying for the affordable one (Q4 2015):

“they’re helping pay for the future development of the Model 3, which is the more affordable mass market car. That’s where we put all of the revenue we receive from the Model S and X. So it’s always important to bear that in mind that S and X will pay for the Model 3.”

Product philosophy — the perfect car, no service, never-finished (2014-2015)

A cluster of design-standard beliefs. The production car must beat the prototype (Q1 2014):

“So a baseline expectation, Tesla, that whenever we have a prototype, the production car is better in every way. So that’s quite difficult to do and requires some creative problem solving with Model X. So one of the biggest challenges is the thought going through making sure that that is truly a step change in utility for the car and not a gimmick.”

The aphorisms — the perfect car and “the best service is no service” (Q2 2014):

“we go over all the issues that customers reporting with the car and develop action items that had to be addressed to get the car ultimately to the platonic ideal of a perfect car. That’s what we’re aiming for.”

“the best service is no service. That’s really what we want is a car that never needs to be serviced. And I think we’re getting there quite rapidly.”

The million-mile ambition-reset (Q3 2015) — raising the bar from a number to “never wear out”:

“we changed the goal of the drive unit Endurance from being approximately 200,000 miles to being 1,000,000 miles. Just basically, we want drive units that just never wear out. That’s our goal.”

And the continuous-improvement worldview — Tesla has no “model years,” so the right time to buy is always now (Q3 2015 → Q4 2015):

“a common question that I get is from friends is, when should I buy a Model S? And my answer is always right now because and they say, well, aren’t you going to make a better one 6 months? They’re like, yes, of course. But if their goal is to only buy a Model S when there aren’t significant improvements happening, then they will never buy 1.”

“we don’t plan to obsolete things. We just relentlessly make things better. So for example, for the S, there’s an average of 20 improvements per week.”

“If you want to wait until the car stops improving, you’ll be waiting forever.”

Optimism, time-perception, and candor — the temperament (2013-2015)

Several small self-revealing tics. The “clear path / no obstacles” optimism about a future goal, and the “miracles required” formulation (Q2 2013):

“I don’t see any I see not really actually, I’d say, I not only do not see obstacles, I see a fairly clear path to that vehicle.”

“There’s a huge amount of work, but miracles required.”

His candid awareness of his own compressed sense of time (Q3 2014) — restating the prior era’s “Tesla time frame” tell:

“Well, our definition of far is other people’s definition of not that far.”

The exponential-extrapolation reasoning he uses to justify aggressive long-term targets (Q2 2015):

“I do remain confident about half a million cars in 2020, and, you know, maybe being able to exceed that. I mean, it’s worth noting that if, you know, so 2020, that’s five years from now. If you go five years in the past for Tesla, we were producing 600 cars per year. Now we can produce 600 cars in three days.”

The expectation-management psychology — deliberately not over-promising so that success still feels like success (Q2 2015):

“Frankly, the main thing is we don’t wanna set, you know, high expectations and then the only way for us to feel good about the future is that if we exceed really high expectations. It’s sort of like, winning needs to feel like winning, if that makes any sense.”

The self-revealing engineer’s bias (Q4 2014) — he frames almost everything, even customer service, as an engineering problem:

“I tend to view, I guess, it’s my own bias, but most things, since I’m an engineer, I kind of view things as an engineering problem. But not everything is an engineering problem, but I think it’s like you’ve got to design a system and sometimes those systems are in the form of a car or it’s a charging thing or it’s a way that you communicate with prospective customers.”

The blunt candor markers — skepticism of the battery hype cycle (Q1 2015) and the “more BS” judgment of the industry (Q3 2014; the transcript reads “factory industry,” in context the battery/cell-supplier industry):

“There’s, like, all these things which are big on promise and short on delivery when it comes to battery chemistry and it’s just a real hard problem. You know, hardly a week goes by that there’s not some alleged breakthrough in batteries.”

“The factory industry has to have more BS in it than any industry I’ve ever encountered. It’s insane.”

And the era’s emotional close — the personal toll of the Model X ramp, proto-“production hell” language (Q4 2015):

“the last several months have been quite excruciating, I’d say. I mean, many late nights and weekends, but I think we’re through the worst of it at this point.”

What is deliberately NOT quoted

  • All financial numbers and quantified guidance — revenue, gross-margin, deliveries, reservation counts, ZEV credits, the CapEx dollar figures, the capital-raise mechanics — kept in prose or omitted as business/financial spec. (What is quoted under “capital” elsewhere is the reasoning posture, never a figure; the Apple-market-cap line and the “staggering amounts on CapEx” line are summarized in prose as stated personal bets, not block-quoted as fact — see the Tone note.)
  • All product/engineering detail — battery-cell chemistry, 18650-vs-large-format specifics, Supercharger/drivetrain engineering, Gigafactory siting, Autopilot sensor hardware — engineering, not mind.
  • Deepak Ahuja’s (CFO) and JB Straubel’s (CTO) turns, and every analyst question — only Elon Musk is quoted. The candidate “$35,000 / 200 mile range” Gen-3 line, the “shipping 2 tons of metal” logistics line, and the leasing/Apple-into-cars asides are summarized in prose as dated forecasts/values rather than block-quoted, to keep the page on the durable mental models.

Connections (pages touched)

  • The engineering algorithmextended with the era’s birth-of-a-thesis arc: “a version of the factory … version 1 of this Gigafactory” (Q3 2013) → “design the machine that makes the machine, not just … off the shelf equipment” (Q2 2014) → “it is way harder to make the machine that makes the machine than … the machine in the 1st place” (Q3 2014) — production-is-the-hard-problem stated in its earliest mature form.
  • Autonomous drivingextended with the era’s dated autonomy-timeline progression: the first “7 years … could be up to 10” forecast (Q3 2014), the “create our own data set for driving” strategy and the “Autopilot in a plane” driver-attention framing (Q2 2015), and the “15 to 20 year time frame … a lot sooner [for Tesla]” + “like owning a horse” conviction (Q3 2015) — Autopilot’s on-the-record origin, before the later shifts.
  • First principlesextended with the reject-rate “in the limit” cell reasoning (Q2 2013), the fuel-cell best-case argument (“Success is not one of the possible outcomes”) and “hydrogen is an energy carrier not an energy source” (Q2 2014), the “get the molecules in the right shape … not strip value out” cost framing (Q1 2014), “Don’t send us PowerPoint … one cell that works” empiricism (Q3 2014), the terawatt-hour macro-energy calc (Q1 2015), and the stationary-storage “shut down half of the world’s power plants” buffering argument (Q2 2015).
  • Sustainable-energy missionextended with the catalyst framing (“I really do encourage other manufacturers,” Q2 2013; “since creating the company,” Q3 2014), the urgency framing (“reduce the probability of a catastrophe,” Q2 2014), the inevitability framing (“the whole industry will go electric,” Q2 2015), and the master-plan funding logic (“S and X will pay for the Model 3,” Q4 2015).
  • Vertical integrationextended with the era’s in-sourcing continuation: “when we’ve in sourced something, it got cheaper” (Q2 2014) and “build value by doing hard things, not outsourcing those hard things” (Q3 2015).
  • Teslaextended with a “2013-2015 earnings calls” note threading the Model-S-ramp-to-Model-X-launch arc, the Gigafactory and Autopilot introductions, and the era’s mental models.
  • Elon Muskextended with a “What the 2013-2015 Tesla earnings calls reveal” section threading the machine-that-makes-the-machine thesis, the sharpening autonomy timeline, the least-lucky-supplier production model, the engineer’s-bias self-revelation, the expectation-management psychology, and the rare “some hubris there with the X” self-correction.