Skip to content

Tesla posts 1st annual profit but misses analysts’ estimates

  • Zimmer Motorcars Corp. | Zimmer Motorcars Corp. was established in...

    John Prieto/The Denver Post // Getty Images

    Zimmer Motorcars Corp. | Zimmer Motorcars Corp. was established in Syracuse, New York, in 1978 as a manufacturer of neo-classic automobiles. The idea for this automobile company came from an illustration for a car that Paul Zimmer, chairman and president of Zimmer Corp., drew on a napkin at a dinner with son Bob. The elder Zimmer then told his son they were going to build a neo-classically designed car and that he, Bob, would oversee operation of Zimmer Motorcars Corp. In the 1980s, the company employed as many as 175 people and had $25 million in annual revenue. In 1988, Bob Zimmer sold his shares in the company, and then Paul Zimmer suffered a heart attack and could not devote as much time to the company as he once had. Without the Zimmers, the company floundered and was forced into bankruptcy.

  • Studebaker Automobile Co. | Studebaker Automobile Co., founded in South...

    National Motor Museum/Heritage Images // Getty Images

    Studebaker Automobile Co. | Studebaker Automobile Co., founded in South Bend, Indiana, was another company that made electrically-powered cars at the beginning of the 20th century. By 1904, the company started selling gas-powered cars—two-cylinder, 16-horsepower touring vehicles. In 1913, Studebaker was the third-largest producer of cars in the U.S., trailing Ford and Overland. The company survived the Great Depression and produced trucks for the military during World War II. After the war, the company produced a curiously-styled car called "Coming-and-Going cars," because both ends looked identical. Packard Motor Car Co. bought Studebaker, and the combined company found it difficult to compete with General Motors, Ford, and Chrysler. In March 1966, Studebaker shuttered its Hamilton, Ontario, facilities, ending 114 years in business.

  • Marmon Motor Car Co. | Marmon Motor Car Co., founded...

    Topical Press/Hulton Archive // Getty Images

    Marmon Motor Car Co. | Marmon Motor Car Co., founded by brothers Howard and Walter Marmon in Indianapolis, began building cars in 1902. The company, which would become famous for the Wasp car, which racing legend Ray Harroun drove while winning the 1911 Indianapolis 500. Marmon developed a reputation for reliable, speedy, upscale cars that were favored by celebrities such as actors Francis X. Bushman and Douglas Fairbanks. The company was known for technological breakthroughs such as the V engines, as well as innovations such as the rear-view mirror and the use of aluminum in auto manufacturing. In 1929, Marmon introduced an under-$1,000 car, but the stock market crash that year worsened its financial woes.

  • Elkhart Carriage and Motor Car Co., Elcar Motor Co. |...

    Jay Paull // Getty Images

    Elkhart Carriage and Motor Car Co., Elcar Motor Co. | The Elkhart Carriage and Motor Car Co., and later the Elcar Motor Co. of Elkhart, Indiana, lasted from 1915 to 1934. The company created the Elcar automobile, considered one of America's best-made assembled automobiles in the early part of the 20th century. The company also was involved in the taxicab sector, which kept people employed during the Great Depression that devastated the assembled-car industry. The taxi industry would help sustain the company for much of the economic downturn. However, Elcar was unable to survive America's worst economic crisis.

  • Tucker Corp. | Tucker Corp. was the brainchild of Preston...

    Dave Mathias/The Denver Post // Getty Images

    Tucker Corp. | Tucker Corp. was the brainchild of Preston Tucker, who was a visionary automobile entrepreneur. In 1948, he built a revolutionary rear-engine sedan, a vehicle shaped like a torpedo, that was the first to include disc brakes and a center headlight that swivels during cornering, among other features. Tucker claimed he had opposition from within the automobile industry and said so in an open letter that appeared in newspapers all over the country, accused them of planting spies in his factories and alleged Tucker dealers were being harassed. Tucker's financial troubles and accusations of stock fraud (Tucker was found innocent) doomed the company. The story was made into a movie in 1988, "Tucker: The Man and His Dream," directed by Francis Ford Coppola and starring Jeff Bridges.

  • Midget Motors Corp. | Midget Motors Corp. made the King...

    Sasha/Hulton Archive // Getty Images

    Midget Motors Corp. | Midget Motors Corp. made the King Midget, a microcar produced between 1946 and 1970. Company founders Claud Dry and Dale Orcutt, two Civil Air Patrol pilots, first sold the King Midget in Athens, Ohio. Originally, the company offered a kit to build the car. But then the company added fully-assembled cars and eventually offered only finished cars. Midget Motors appealed to home mechanics and advertised its cars via advertisements in Popular Mechanics and Popular Science magazines. If you wanted a King Midget delivered to your home in the U.S., it would take three to 10 weeks. The price for the 690-pound vehicle was $870. A fire at the plant and the company's inability to meet federal safety laws doomed Midget Motors in 1970.

  • Kaiser-Frazer Corp. | The pairing of shipbuilding mogul Henry J....

    Camerique // Getty Images

    Kaiser-Frazer Corp. | The pairing of shipbuilding mogul Henry J. Kaiser (famous for building Liberty ships during World War II) and experienced auto executive Joseph W. Frazer (he got Willys-Overland the Jeep contract in 1941) to form Kaiser-Frazer Corp. in 1945 seemed promising, as they hoped to take advantage of the pent-up demand for cars in the post-World War II market. They set up production at Willow Run, Michigan, utilizing the same plant where Ford had constructed B-24 bombers during the war. The company produced the Kaiser, priced in the lower-medium range, and the Frazer focused on the luxury segment. At first, sales went well, but the company had problems finding raw materials and components. Kaiser-Frazer's cost structure also was higher than its rivals, and that hurt the company. Kaiser-Frazer abandoned the passenger car market in 1955.

  • Duryea Motor Wagon Co. | Brothers Charles and Frank Duryea...

    Bettmann // Getty Images

    Duryea Motor Wagon Co. | Brothers Charles and Frank Duryea were the first Americans to produce a commercial automobile that was powered by gasoline. They were also the first to incorporate an American business for constructing cars to be sold to the public. They tested their vehicle on the streets of Springfield, Massachusetts, on Sept. 20, 1893. Three years later, Charles Duryea founded the Duryea Motor Wagon Co. and sold 13 cars of a limousine whose production lasted into the 1920s. The Duryeas were involved in several automotive firsts. They participated in the nation's inaugural car race; put up for sale the first commercial automobile in 1896; and later that year, a Duryea vehicle hit a bicyclist in New York City in the nation's first recorded traffic accident.

  • Chalmers Motor Co. | Chalmers Motor Co., based in Detroit...

    National Motor Museum/Heritage Images // Getty Images

    Chalmers Motor Co. | Chalmers Motor Co., based in Detroit started in 1908 and made high-end vehicles until 1923, when it merged with Chrysler. The company takes its name from Hugh Chalmers, the chief executive officer of National Cash Register Co. Chalmers left NCR around the turn of the 20th century to try his luck in the emerging automobile industry. A born salesman, Chalmers was also a baseball fan and saw an opportunity to connect his company with America's pastime. He created a marketing campaign that would become the predecessor of baseball's most valuable player award, by giving a car to the leading hitter in each league.

  • Nash Motors Co. | Nash Motors was founded in 1916...

    ISC Images & Archives // Getty Images

    Nash Motors Co. | Nash Motors was founded in 1916 by former General Motors president Charles W. Nash who had acquired the Thomas B. Jeffery Co. and changed its name. Jeffery's most well-known car was the Rambler, whose mass production from a plant in Kenosha, Wisconsin began in 1902. Nash cars developed a reputation for sturdiness and value. Even so, the company struggled to compete with Ford, GM, and Chrysler. From 1937 to 1954, Nash Motors was the automotive division of the Nash-Kelvinator Corp. and continued to be innovative. The brand debuted heating and ventilation systems as well as unibody construction. In 1954, Nash-Kelvinator acquired Hudson Motor Car Co., forming the American Motor Co.

  • Aerocar International | Moulton Taylor founded Aerocar International in the...

    Los Angeles Examiner/USC Libraries/Corbis // Getty Images

    Aerocar International | Moulton Taylor founded Aerocar International in the late 1940s to capitalize on the soaring interest in civil aviation and tap the ranks of pilots who trained to fly combat planes during World War II. Taylor's aircraft was a hybrid car/airplane that drew inspiration from Robert Fulton Jr.'s Airphibian, and was certified by the Civil Aeronautics Administration. The Aerocar could accommodate two people, had a four-cylinder engine and could reach a top speed of 110 miles per hour, and 67 miles per hour on the ground. It took 10 minutes to convert the plane to a car.

  • Maxwell Motor Co. | Maxwell Motor Co. was formed in...

    Buyenlarge // Getty Images

    Maxwell Motor Co. | Maxwell Motor Co. was formed in 1913, and the origins of today's Chrysler are in Maxwell company. Jonathan Maxwell and Benjamin Briscoe made the first Maxwell car made in 1904. Their cars at the dawn of the automotive industry boasted technological innovations such as using a driveshaft instead of the chain drive, which was more commonly used at that time. In 1909, Maxwell had sales of 9,400 vehicles and was the nation's third-largest automaker. The company sponsored a national cross-country drive, the first such event in which a woman with a female mechanic participated. In 1920, the company, awash in debt and near collapse, convinced Walter P. Chrysler to leave General Motors to try to revitalize the company. Under Chrysler's leadership, the company began to make competitive automobiles. In 1925, the Maxwell Motor Company became the Chrysler Corp.

  • Hupp Motor Car Co. | The Hupp Motor Car Co....

    National Motor Museum/Heritage Images // Getty Images

    Hupp Motor Car Co. | The Hupp Motor Car Co. had its origins in Detroit and was founded by Robert "Bobby" Hupp, who had worked at Olds Motor Works and Ford Motor Co. before striking out on his own. His Hupmobile was a small vehicle that debuted in 1909 at the Detroit Automobile Show and became a big success across the country. Among its admirers was Henry Ford. The vehicle was inexpensive and developed a reputation for its durability and reliability, important in the days before well-paved roads. The Hupp 20 Runabout was selected as the first car used by the Detroit police force. The company was also known for its elegant advertising campaigns. In 1911, Hupp left the company and started other car businesses, all of which failed. Hupp Motor Car Co. continued without him. It eventually filed for bankruptcy in 1940 because of poor management.

  • Stacker compiled a list of 50 car companies that no...

    FPG/Hulton Archive // Getty Images

    Stacker compiled a list of 50 car companies that no longer exist from various historical sources, including car club websites and Hemmings Motor News.

  • Rickenbacker Motor Co. | World War I flying ace Eddie...

    ISC Images & Archives // Getty Images

    Rickenbacker Motor Co. | World War I flying ace Eddie Rickenbacker founded the Rickenbacker Motor Co. in 1921 in Detroit. Rickenbacker used his World War I fighter squadron emblem of a top hat inside a ring as a symbol for the company, which made sporting coupés, touring cars, sedans, and roadsters. Rickenbacker cars were too expensive for the era and sales were disappointing. The death of auto designer Walter Flanders was a setback for the company. Rickenbacker, tired of company infighting, left Rickenbacker Motor in 1926, and the business closed in 1927. In a curious twist, the company's manufacturing equipment was sold to Audi and transported to Germany, the country Rickenbacker fought against in World War I.

  • Willys-Overland Motor Co. | In 1908, automotive pioneer John North...

    Library of Congress/Corbis/VCG // Getty Images

    Willys-Overland Motor Co. | In 1908, automotive pioneer John North Willys bought the Standard Wheel Co. in Toledo, Ohio, and four years later renamed it the Willys-Overland Motor Co. The company struggled over the next two decades, grappling with labor unrest much of the time, and went bankrupt during the Great Depression. It was reorganized as Willys-Overland Motors, Inc. in 1936. Willys is best known for building military Jeeps in World War II, manufacturing about 330,000 of the vehicles used by the U.S. military between 1941 and 1945. In 1953, Kaiser Motors purchased the company, and in 1963 the Willys name vanished when the company was renamed Kaiser-Jeep.

  • Kissel Motor Co. | The Kissel Motor Car Co. was...

    National Motor Museum/Heritage Images // Getty Images

    Kissel Motor Co. | The Kissel Motor Car Co. was launched in 1906 by Louis Kissel and his sons, George and William, in Hartford, Wisconsin. The company custom-built automobiles, hearses, fire trucks, taxicabs, and trucks. During World War I, Kissel Motor produced trucks for the U.S. military and for the Allies. Kissel Motor prospered after the war. Its most famous car, made from 1919 through 1927, was the Speedster, nicknamed the "Gold Bug." The car was owned by some of the most famous personalities of the 1920s, such as actress Greta Garbo, aviator Amelia Earhart, and boxer Jack Dempsey. Kissel losses climbed during the Great Depression, and an attempted hostile takeover by New Era Motors forced Kissel Motor to file for receivership protection in November 1930.

  • Lozier Motor Co. | The Lozier Motor Co. produced luxury...

    Jay Paull // Getty Images

    Lozier Motor Co. | The Lozier Motor Co. produced luxury vehicles from 1900 to 1915 during a period known in automotive circles as "The Brass Era," when brass fittings were used for lights and radiators. The company was founded in Plattsburgh, New York, on the western shore of Lake Champlain, by Henry Abram Lozier, an Indiana-born sewing machine and bicycle manufacturer. A Lozier was involved in a controversial finish for the first Indianapolis 500, in which many automobile historians believe the Lozier vehicle won but was denied the first-place prize because of a chaotic finish involving an accident. Beyond the racetrack, Lozier faced mounting competition and tried to enter the mid-priced car segment in 1914. A merger with Ford Motor Co. failed and the company declared bankruptcy in 1915.

  • Fisker Automotive | Fisker Automotive, based in Anaheim, California, was...

    Bill Pugliano // Getty Images

    Fisker Automotive | Fisker Automotive, based in Anaheim, California, was known for producing the Fisker Karma, one of the first luxury plug-in hybrid electric vehicles. The vehicle debuted at the 2008 North American International Auto Show and was first delivered in 2011. Production of the Fisker Karma was suspended in November 2012 following the bankruptcy of its battery supplier, A123 Systems. At that point, about 2,450 Karmas had been built since 2011 and more than 2,000 cars had been sold worldwide. A dispute with the Department of Energy over a loan helped doom Fisker Automotive, which went bankrupt in 2013. The next year, Fisker Automotive's Karma vehicle design, tooling, and a manufacturing facility in Delaware were purchased by Chinese auto parts conglomerate Wanxiang Group.

  • Saturn | General Motors launched the Saturn brand in 1985...

    John B. Carnett/Bonnier Corp. // Getty Images

    Saturn | General Motors launched the Saturn brand in 1985 to try to compete with the Japanese auto brands that were making inroads in the American market. The company was billed as "a different kind of car company," created by GM as a standalone car company, though wholly owned by General Motors. It was managed separately in the beginning, but eventually was brought into GM's fold. Saturn's first car was the S-Series and it was well-received by automotive critics and the public. The company would turn out models such as the Ion and Aura. After GM's bankruptcy and restructuring in 2009, the auto giant tried to sell Saturn. No deal materialized, and GM ended Saturn production in 2009.

  • Stanley Motor Carriage Co. | The Stanley Motor Carriage Co....

    National Motor Museum/Heritage Images // Getty Images

    Stanley Motor Carriage Co. | The Stanley Motor Carriage Co. was known for making steam-powered motor cars, known as Stanley Steamers, although the company made various models. Freelan O. Stanley and his wife Flora climbed Mount Washington in Maine in 1899 in a Stanley Steamer. It was the first time any automobile had climbed the mountain, the tallest in the northeastern United States. Gas engines made the Stanley steam cars obsolete in the 1920s, as gas engines produced more power and had become easier to operate at a lower cost. The company closed in 1924.

  • Peerless Motor Car Co. | The Peerless brand of cars...

    National Motor Museum/Heritage Images // Getty Images

    Peerless Motor Car Co. | The Peerless brand of cars in Cleveland was produced by the Peerless Motor Car Co. from 1900 to 1931. Peerless was considered one of the three "P" car companies, along with Packard and Pierce-Arrow. Peerless was known for producing luxurious touring car models, with a top price of $6,000 in 1905. The market turned against large touring cars in the 1920s, and Peerless was forced to lower its prices and tried to promote medium-sized cars. Peerless fell victim to the Depression, and when it closed in 1931, it was the last Cleveland-based manufacturer of cars.

  • Hudson Motor Car Co. | The Hudson Motor Car Company...

    Library of Congress/Corbis/VCG // Getty Images

    Hudson Motor Car Co. | The Hudson Motor Car Company was founded by Detroit department store magnate Joseph L. Hudson in 1909. The company sold 4,000 of its four-cylinder models in 1909, which at the time was the most sales of any car company. Hudson Motor Car Company had other ambitions. It built a more powerful six-cylinder engine in 1913, called the "Super Six." The car wrote itself into automotive history in 1916, when Hudsons powered by the six-cylinder engine broke records for the first two-way transcontinental trip as well as the quickest climb up Pikes Peak. Hudson sold well in the 1920s, with production topping at 300,000 in 1929. The company merged with Nash-Kelvinator Corp. in 1954.

  • White Motor Co. | The White Motor Co., another car...

    Bettmann // Getty Images

    White Motor Co. | The White Motor Co., another car manufacturer based in Cleveland, made automobiles, trucks, and agricultural tractors from 1900 until 1980. In 1909, White made its first vehicle under its own name. During World War I, the company shifted its focus to trucks, which proved to be lucrative. Plunging sales during the Great Depression forced the company to briefly merge with Studebaker in 1932. It was reorganized independently two years later and became a major producer of heavy-duty trucks and buses. White took on debt to make purchases of smaller truck makers, and years of mismanagement, coupled with economic downturns, and changes in the industry took their toll. White filed for bankruptcy in 1980.

  • Stout Motor Car Co. | Detroit-based Stout Motor Car Co....

    FPG/Hulton Archive // Getty Images

    Stout Motor Car Co. | Detroit-based Stout Motor Car Co. made a beetle-shaped vehicle called a "Scarab" that derived its shape from aircraft designer William Bushnell Stout. The vehicle with an art deco aesthetic was made mostly of aluminum and rode the trend of American cars that were getting bigger and sturdier by the 1930s. It was an early version of a minivan, with a long wheelbase. The vehicle also had ambient lighting, thermostat-controlled heating, and power door locks. The car never went into mass production.

  • Pierce-Arrow Motor Car Co. | The Pierce-Arrow Motor Car Co....

    Underwood Archives // Getty Images

    Pierce-Arrow Motor Car Co. | The Pierce-Arrow Motor Car Co. was a luxury carmaker based in Buffalo that operated from 1901 to 1938. Besides luxury cars, Pierce-Arrow also made commercial trucks, fire trucks, boats, and motorcycles. Founder George Pierce focused on the luxury segment and made a larger, more luxurious car for the affluent segment. Pierce-Arrows were considered the American Rolls-Royce, and were favored by U.S. presidents and celebrities. Economic downturns beginning in the early 1930s hurt the company, which had difficulty competing against Big Three rivals Ford, GM, and Chrysler's luxury brands.

  • Essex Motor Co. | The Essex was an automobile produced...

    National Motor Museum/Heritage Images // Getty Images

    Essex Motor Co. | The Essex was an automobile produced by the Essex Motor Co. between 1918 and 1922, and by the Hudson Motor Car Co. from 1922 and 1933. The vehicle was small, durable, and affordably priced. The Essex is frequently credited by automotive historians with starting a trend toward enclosed passenger compartments that were affordable and away from open touring cars' design. Essex sales held their own through the 1920s, but began to slip down as the Great Depression took hold. The company debuted a redesigned Essex in 1932 dubbed the Essex-Terraplane that survived the company, which went out of business in 1933.

  • National Motor Vehicle Co. | The National Motor Vehicle Co.,...

    Universal History Archive/Universal Images Group // Getty Images

    National Motor Vehicle Co. | The National Motor Vehicle Co., founded in Indianapolis, operated from 1900 to 1924. One of the company's presidents, Arthur C. Newby, was instrumental in creating the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. The National Motor Vehicle Co. at first focused on making electric vehicles, but stopped producing them in 1906, and switched to gasoline-engined cars. The company produced a wide range of passenger vehicles, from four to 12-cylinder engines, and many racing cars. A National Motor car won the 1912 Indianapolis 500. In 1922, The company was merged into an association of car companies that went out of business in 1924.

  • DeLorean Motor Co. | Maverick automobile mogul John DeLorean created...

    Tony Korody/Sygma/Sygma // Getty Images

    DeLorean Motor Co. | Maverick automobile mogul John DeLorean created the DMC-12, the car that moviegoers know from the 1985 runaway time-travel hit "Back to the Future" that starred Michael J. Fox. DeLorean built a plant in Belfast, Northern Ireland, to produce the DMC-12. The car was sleek but was criticized for being underpowered, and was not as fuel-efficient as advertised. The company ran into money problems and only produced about 9,000 vehicles. New financing failed to materialize and the company went bankrupt in 1982.

  • Franklin Automobile Co. | The Franklin Automobile Co., based in...

    Jay Paull // Getty Images

    Franklin Automobile Co. | The Franklin Automobile Co., based in Syracuse, New York, created the Franklin motor car that was invented by engineer John Wilkinson and produced by H. H. Franklin, an industrialist, beginning in 1902. The vehicle had an air-cooled engine and flexible, lightweight construction during an era when other luxury car companies were making lumbering cars. The Franklins set many racing records in their day and were known for their handling, speed, and durability. Like some other luxury carmakers, it did not survive the Great Depression.

  • Harroun Motors Corp. | The Harroun Motor Sales Corp. operated...

    Sports Studio Photos // Getty Images

    Harroun Motors Corp. | The Harroun Motor Sales Corp. operated from 1916 to 1920 and produced the Harroun automobile in Wayne, Michigan. The company was named after founder and racing legend Ray Harroun, who won the first Indianapolis 500 in 1911. The company was incorporated in 1917 with $10 million in capital. The company was slow in getting vehicles to the public because of delays in the construction of its factory, which was designed to manufacture 24,000 cars a year. The company also was hampered by its inability to find a few new investors. Harroun Motors did develop the Harroun car, a four-cylinder, 16-horsepower vehicle. The company eventually closed in 1922, succumbing to a severe post-World War I economic downturn in 1922.

  • Durant Motors Inc. | After he was fired as CEO...

    Bettmann // Getty Images

    Durant Motors Inc. | After he was fired as CEO of General Motors, William Durant founded Durant Motors Inc. in 1921. The company produced a full line of vehicles. In 1922, he bought luxury-car maker Locomobile in a liquidation sale, to compete in the high-end sector against Cadillac and Lincoln. He helped create dealer networks and marketing incentives for his employees, and managed a sprawling network of decentralized assembly lines across the country. However, the company overexpanded, accumulated debt, and the Great Depression led to its demise.

  • Yellow Cab Manufacturing Co. | The Yellow Cab Manufacturing Co....

    USC Libraries/Corbis // Getty Images

    Yellow Cab Manufacturing Co. | The Yellow Cab Manufacturing Co. was created in 1920 by Chicago car salesman John Hertz. The immigrant from Austria had entered the taxicab business eight years earlier with Walden W. Shaw, by converting trade-in cars into taxicabs. Hertz painted the taxis yellow to attract the attention of would-be riders. He incorporated the Yellow Cab Co. in 1915. By 1925, Yellow Cab was the biggest taxi company in the world, with 2,700 vehicles. Hertz' taxis featured innovations such as automatic windshield wipers and telephone dispatching of taxis. In 1929, Hertz sold his share of the company to focus on the rental car business.

  • American Motors Corp. | American Motors Corp. existed from 1954...

    National Motor Museum/Heritage Images // Getty Images

    American Motors Corp. | American Motors Corp. existed from 1954 to 1987. The company came about following the merger of Hudson Motor Car and Nash-Kelvinator in 1954, and at the time was the largest corporate merger. AMC sold the Jeep brand from 1970 after it purchased Kaiser-Jeep, and also sold the Pacer and Concord under its nameplate. In addition, AMC produced the Rambler, which was named Motor Trend Car of the Year in 1963. In 1968, the company introduced the Javelin to compete in the sports car segment. French automaker Renault owned 46.1% of AMC stock, and in 1987, Chrysler agreed to buy Renault's AMC shares, as well as the remaining stock.

  • Winton Motor Carriage Co. | Winton Motor Carriage Co. was...

    PhotoQuest // Getty Images

    Winton Motor Carriage Co. | Winton Motor Carriage Co. was another Cleveland-based automobile maker that originated at the end of the 19th century, and was one of the first American companies to sell a motorized vehicle. The company was founded by bicycle maker Alexander Winton, a Scottish immigrant who promoted his first cars by driving one to New York City from Cleveland in 1897. Winton was the first American company to sell a standard gasoline-powered automobile. It cost $1,000. By 1916, the company was producing 2,450 vehicles a year and had branches in New York, London, Toronto, and Honolulu. Winton failed to adjust to the introduction of less expensive vehicles produced by Ford, and in 1924 ceased automobile production.

  • REO Motor Car Co. | REO Motor Car Co. was...

    PhotoQuest // Getty Images

    REO Motor Car Co. | REO Motor Car Co. was founded by Ransom Eli Olds in 1904. He organized a network of parts companies such as the National Coil Co., the Michigan Screw Co., and the Atlas Drop Forge Co. to supply his car company. By 1907, REO had sales of $4 million, and the company was one of the four largest car companies in the nation. After 1908, even though Olds' cars had improved, the company was losing market share to emerging auto giants Ford and General Motors. The company survived on its reputation for durable cars and trucks. Truck orders during World War II helped sustain the company, but the postwar era was an unstable time for the company. In 1954, it was sold to the Bohn Aluminum & Brass Corp., and three years later became a unit of the White Motor Co.

  • Oakland Motor Car Co. | The Oakland Motor Car Co.,...

    Bettmann // Getty Images

    Oakland Motor Car Co. | The Oakland Motor Car Co., based in Pontiac, Michigan, was named after the Michigan county of Oakland. The company was founded in 1907 by Edward Murphy, founder of a buggy company in Pontiac. In 1908, Oakland produced a Model A that cost $1,300 and Model E for $2,150. The company's rapid growth and accompanying financial pressures bore down on the company. General Motors Co., led by William C. Durant, saw this as an opportunity to bring Oakland into the GM fold, and Oakland became a division of General Motors. The company continued to make modestly-priced automobiles until 1931, when the brand was dropped in favor of GM's Pontiac.

  • Packard Motor Car Co. | The Packard Motor Car Co.,...

    National Motor Museum/Heritage Images // Getty Images

    Packard Motor Car Co. | The Packard Motor Car Co., founded by brothers James Ward and William Dowd Packard, had a long run, from 1899 to 1956. When it opened in 1903, Packard's Detroit plant, constructed by famed architect Albert Kahn, was the most advanced auto factory in the world. The company gained a reputation for innovation, such as the modern steering wheel, and for luxury. After World War II, Packard aimed at making cars for the middle class, but the company was unable to compete against GM, Ford, and Chrysler. Its last car model was produced in 1958. The renowned Detroit plant ended manufacturing the previous year. Attempts to bring back the brand faltered.

of

Expand
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:

Riding a sales surge amid a global pandemic, Tesla Inc. reported that it posted its first annual net profit in 2020.

In a year that saw its stock soar to make it the world’s most valuable automaker, Tesla earned $721 million, capped by a $270 million profit in the fourth quarter. It was the company’s sixth straight quarterly net profit after years of mostly losses.

A year earlier, Tesla lost $862 million. Data provider FactSet says 2020 ended a string of annual red ink that began in 2006.

Once again the company needed regulatory credits purchased by other automakers in order to make a profit. Without $1.58 billion in credits for the year, Tesla would have lost money. Other automakers buy the credits when they can’t meet emissions and fuel economy standards.

Tesla said that excluding special items, it made $2.24 per share for the year, falling short of Wall Street expectations of $2.45. Full-year revenue was $31.54 billion, beating estimates of $31.1 billion.

From October through December, the company made an adjusted 80 cents per share, below Wall Street estimates of $1.02. Fourth-quarter revenue was $10.74 billion, surpassing estimates of $10.47 billion.

The per-share earnings misses sent shares of the Palo Alto, California-based company down 5.5% in extended trading after the earnings announcement. Still, the stock is trading at about about 10 times its value at the start of 2020, closing Wednesday at $864.16.

Tesla said in its investor letter that over a “multi-year horizon,” it expects 50% growth in annual vehicle deliveries. Some years, like 2021, may see faster growth, it said. Tesla also said its operating profit margin will keep growing as factory capacity expands.

Nearly 1,000 owners are testing the company’s “full self-driving” systems on public roads, Musk said on a conference call with analysts. He said he drives the system itself and it’s common for him not to intervene. He expects the system to drive more reliably than humans this year.

Despite the name, Tesla has warned that “full self-driving” is still a driver assist system and cannot drive itself. Critics say the system doesn’t have the proper sensors to drive autonomously.

Musk had predicted a fleet of self-driving Tesla robotaxis by the end of last year. He says he’s confident the company can reach fully autonomous driving under all conditions this year.

Tesla also said it is updating its older vehicles, the Model S sedan and X SUV with new motors, batteries and interiors. A “plaid” high-performance version of the Model S will be able to go from zero to 60 mph (97 kilometers per hour) in under 2 seconds, making it the world’s fastest car, Musk said.

Tesla’s vehicle sales rose 36% last year, but the company fell just short of its annual goal to deliver 500,000 vehicles. The company delivered 499,500 vehicles for the year.

The sales jump came even though Tesla was forced to close its only U.S. assembly plant for almost two months as the novel coronavirus surged in the spring. The factory in Fremont, California, reopened in May with Musk defying orders from local health authorities.

Musk had promised 500,000 deliveries before the pandemic hit, but aided by sales from a new factory in China, the company almost hit the number.

The meteoric stock price rise generated big payoffs for Musk, making him one of the world’s richest people.

Critics say Tesla’s sales and profits are puny compared with established automakers such as Toyota and General Motors, and its huge valuation is not justified by financial fundamentals.

Tesla faces challenges this year from traditional automakers, which are rolling out more electric vehicles. Edmunds.com Executive Director of Insights Jessica Caldwell says the number of electric vehicles on sale in the U.S. will rise from 17 to 29 this year.

Many will be eligible for a $7,500 federal tax credit, giving them an advantage over Tesla, which has used up its allocation.

“Although there has yet to be a true ‘Tesla killer’ in the EV arena, a bigger pool of contenders eligible for federal tax credits could have the power to sway some Tesla shoppers,” Caldwell wrote in an email.

In response to a question, Musk said he expects to be Tesla’s CEO for “several years,” without giving specifics. He said no one should be CEO forever and he would like more free time instead of working day and night. But he said there are many projects that he would like to see through.

____

This story has been corrected to show that Tesla earned $1.58 billion in regulatory credit payments from other automakers, took in $31.54 billion in revenue for the year and $10.74 billion in the fourth quarter.