How Tesla plans to compete in China's intense EV market

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Wells Fargo Autos Analyst Colin Langan joins Yahoo Finance to discuss Tesla's recent quarterly earnings, how Tesla was able to maintain production, and the company's continuing growth.

Video Transcript

BRIAN CHEUNG: Welcome back. Obviously we've been talking about Tesla earnings, which reported after the bell yesterday. Record revenue and profits coming in for the third quarter alongside deliveries in the quarter of 241,300 units.

So let's get a deeper dive into the earnings report with Colin Langan, autos analyst at Wells Fargo. Colin, great to have you on the show this morning.

The CFO and the master of coin, I guess if you will, was saying yesterday that they're facing supply-chain issues as well, but they said the only way to address that in the immediate term is just to build more cars on the existing production lines. So what is the strategy for Tesla? Have they done a good job mitigating some of these macro issues, in your view, based off of the earnings that we got yesterday?

COLIN LANGAN: Yeah, I mean, of course. I mean, their production was up sequentially. I mean, if you're looking at the global auto industry, everyone is struggling to get enough chips. I mean, I think they benefit from being more vertically integrated, but they could possibly swap out some of the chips. I mean, they are benefiting that they're much smaller than other automakers, so it's not as much of a piece of the pie of overall global semi demand.

But, you know, it's an anomaly in the quarter. I think we'll be seeing pretty much every automaker other than maybe Ford, who had a pretty bad Q2-- most of them are going to see production down because they couldn't get enough semi chips.

BRIAN SOZZI: Colin, has Tesla's margins, have they hit a short-term peak? Look, they have a lot of production coming up in the months ahead. That will drive some inefficiencies. What's your outlook?

COLIN LANGAN: I mean, I think one of the main issues that, you know, keeps me sort of equal weight is as you go forward, raw-material costs have already rose quite dramatically. I mean, we're looking at cobalt, lithium, aluminum all up 40% year over year, if not more on many of those. That's driving the battery costs up dramatically.

Tesla is very smart in how they do their battery strategy, so a lot of their-- a lot of their contracts are long term. But the problem is as you go into next year, you're going to see those contracts reset. And based on my numbers, it's probably about a $1,900, $2,000 per vehicle headwind once all of those contracts reset. So some of it has already impacted them, but I have a feeling a lot is to come, and that will put margin pressure.