The right jacket or Nike shoes are status symbols in some neighborhoods. The length of your yacht and number of professional crew in others.$35k status symbols still makes me laugh.
Possibly virtue signal is part of the status as well?
The right jacket or Nike shoes are status symbols in some neighborhoods. The length of your yacht and number of professional crew in others.$35k status symbols still makes me laugh.
Elon knows the subsidies help Tesla's competition a lot more than they help Tesla. Tesla's margins allow for price flexibility; that's leverage.
Im confused by these comments. (though that might be nothing new*LOL*)They’re already low cost at the entry level. They have a $35k model. Heck in the time I’ve owned a Tesla(just over 2 years now) the insults have drastically changed. It went from “no one can afford those fancy expensive electric cars” to “for the same price of those today with the price cuts you could buy (insert car here) and now you’re stuck with the depreciation”.
I just don’t get it anymore.
It will go away like the subsidy for hybrid in the early days.It’s not clear yet what will happen to the $7500 subsidy on new EV’s.
Oh not this nonsense again. I hear this enough, but I’ve never met the EV owner that cited the planet for buying the car. I remember stuff being said about that with the Prius early on, but I never met that person either.Possibly virtue signal is part of the status as well?
Starlink would be the cable modem for rural areas all over the world very soon.IN areas like yours, the only hope would be to live next door to a cell tower and be able to get Verizon or T-Mobile home Internet.
The bank is, with 7 and even 8 year loans common now.There aren’t. A base Jetta is $23k and there’s not really anything low cost these days. I don’t think $35k is cheap for a car, but it’s far lower than the average sales price in the US currently. The average sales price is currently higher than the median income in my area. I don’t know who’s buying these cars to be honest.
Yes, agree for those who will pay but wow, it is expensive for much the population. If you have a nearby cell tower you can get a locked in price from $35 to $60 almost forever. Verizon or TMobileStarlink would be the cable modem for rural areas all over the world very soon.
Starlink would be the most important thing that raise the real estate value in many rural area. That turns an impossible to live area into a place you can reasonably raise a family and work from home at.Starlink is available to most rural folks and it's pretty good.
You need to think your market as a bigger market. Some people will move into your area when previously it was not worth it due to the lack of broadband. When enough people are there there will be economy of scale to lay out cables and cell tower and fiber for the more traditional broadband. Going from nothing to something kick starts that.Yes, agree for those who will pay but wow, it is expensive for much the population. If you have a nearby cell tower you can get a locked in price from $35 to $60 almost forever. Verizon or TMobile
Starlink is $120 a month plus $349 for equipment. I just entered my address and it says there is also a "congestion charge" for my area but it doesnt say where this charge is or if it is already in the price which I dont think?
Wasn’t the drop 1.1%? I don’t know what I said that was defensive, I was just questioning the status symbol argument when the median sales price is above a few models not even counting the tax credit.Im confused by these comments. (though that might be nothing new*LOL*)
How is Tesla going to do better by charging $7,500 more for its vehicles?
I mean, we cannot ignore they have a problem and it seems like a new model is the only way out. Am I wrong on this?
What is the excuse for having its first sales drop in the USA in over a decade? Actually first sales drop since 2011
They sold more cars in 2023 than 2024 at a time when its CEO stated 2 years earlier to expect yearly sales growth of around 50%
Not only this, but even after slashing margins and incentives they still could not beat 2023 numbers which weren't all that great either.
I mean, I get you guys being defensive based on comments in here but I truly am just someone who doesnt take any side, I just look at numbers. So am I missing something here other than maybe gibberish from both sides?
This is a good point. Starlink will not be affordable for most in the developing world. Maybe on a shared basis where multiple families (or a village) share the data.Yes, agree for those who will pay but wow, it is expensive for much the population. If you have a nearby cell tower you can get a locked in price from $35 to $60 almost forever. Verizon or TMobile
Starlink is $120 a month plus $349 for equipment. I just entered my address and it says there is also a "congestion charge" for my area but it doesnt say where this charge is or if it is already in the price which I dont think?
Wasn’t the drop 1.1%? I don’t know what I said that was defensive, I was just questioning the status symbol argument when the median sales price is above a few models not even counting the tax credit.
Elon is Tesla’s biggest negative right now just because taking any political stand instantly alienates around half of your possible target audience. I really wasn’t arguing any part of the sales decline though. I only jumped into comment on the coal electrical production percentage and comment on the supposed perception of lower cost EVs still being considered a status symbol. Then again I had a guy I work with ask how I felt about daily driving an $80k car. I had to tell him I didn’t know, I’ve never had one.
It’s possible the vast majority don’t realize how expensive some cars have gotten and how much some of the EVs have come down. I’m sure most don’t keep tabs on this stuff. Most of what I watch and read is car related, so I see most of it as it happens. I know that’s not typical.
Yes, 1.1% decline, sales stalled and they tried like heck to prevent a loss. We can agree that 1.1% drop is nowhere Elon Musks playbook of 50% growth and ok, let but lets cut him a break and slice that in half to 25% sales growth or even more to 20%. I was just commenting between the conversation between you and @JeffKeryk with Jeff implying cutting out the $7,500 tax gift might help Tesla and rightfully so you pointing out the base model is already cheap. Yet the company sales stalled. What is going to pick them up for 2025?Wasn’t the drop 1.1%? I don’t know what I said that was defensive, I was just questioning the status symbol argument when the median sales price is above a few models not even counting the tax credit.
Elon is Tesla’s biggest negative right now just because taking any political stand instantly alienates around half of your possible target audience. I really wasn’t arguing any part of the sales decline though. I only jumped into comment on the coal electrical production percentage and comment on the supposed perception of lower cost EVs still being considered a status symbol. Then again I had a guy I work with ask how I felt about daily driving an $80k car. I had to tell him I didn’t know, I’ve never had one.
It’s possible the vast majority don’t realize how expensive some cars have gotten and how much some of the EVs have come down. I’m sure most don’t keep tabs on this stuff. Most of what I watch and read is car related, so I see most of it as it happens. I know that’s not typical.
You didn’t tell me we were allowed to make up scenarios. I’m going to change my argument now.You cannot value EV the same way a gas car because EV's value has a lot to do with its residual range after battery aging. You can think of it more like a house with an expected roofing cost every 20 years. The roof replacement cost will affect the value of the house, except that EV's aging cost is higher than a gas car. This is the biggest cost IMO, more than the per mile electricity cost if you don't drive your car much.
I will not invest in Tesla because I cannot predict what is Elon thinking all the time. It can go up or down but I do value sleep at night.Yes, 1.1% decline, sales stalled and they tried like heck to prevent a loss. We can agree that 1.1% drop is nowhere Elon Musks playbook of 50% growth and ok, let but lets cut him a break and slice that in half to 25% sales growth or even more to 20%. I was just commenting between the conversation between you and @JeffKeryk with Jeff implying cutting out the $7,500 tax gift might help Tesla and rightfully so you pointing out the base model is already cheap. Yet the company sales stalled. What is going to pick them up for 2025?
You do know I am NOT at all taking sides, Im just analyzing of which my brain does WAY too much of in everything of life. (but that will be another thread someday when I am ready)
I don’t think there’s going to be much pick up in sales anywhere ICE, EV, or otherwise without price adjustments. I’m seeing lots of 0% financing even with Tesla and it wasn’t enough to avoid some loss. We went from shortage to abundance in a very short amount of time in the auto industry. Dealers were gouging and I think manufacturers in many spots got it wrong once they were able to flood the market.Yes, 1.1% decline, sales stalled and they tried like heck to prevent a loss. We can agree that 1.1% drop is nowhere Elon Musks playbook of 50% growth and ok, let but lets cut him a break and slice that in half to 25% sales growth or even more to 20%. I was just commenting between the conversation between you and @JeffKeryk with Jeff implying cutting out the $7,500 tax gift might help Tesla and rightfully so you pointing out the base model is already cheap. Yet the company sales stalled. What is going to pick them up for 2025?
You do know I am NOT at all taking sides, Im just analyzing of which my brain does WAY too much of in everything of life. (but that will be another thread someday when I am ready)
Network price has a lot to do with the government. Equipment is only a small part of it (and that's the only common thing among the world whether Samsung / Erickson / Nokia / Huawei sell to Africa or Latin America or Europe or Russia). Labor cost is different, frequency licensing cost is different, customer affordability is different, etc.This is a good point. Starlink will not be affordable for most in the developing world. Maybe on a shared basis where multiple families (or a village) share the data.
Cellular data in my wife's native Brazil is ridiculously cheap compared to the US. And the speeds are acceptable in my experience, 15-50 Mbps depending on location. I can't imagine many people going for Starlink over cellular data there, unless they live somewhere with no cell signal.
I don't have experience with other third would countries to know if it's representative of others or not. Maybe Mexico, my cell phone works about the same in Mexico as it does in the US, data seems good in tourist areas.
You’re suggesting four major breakthroughs in energy storage capacity, battery charming rate, degradation rate and price. You left out the cost of the charging stations that can economically deliver lightening bolts of energy in 10 minutes .There are tipping points where new technology surpasses old technologies nearly instantaneously. What if a company comes out with an electric vehicle that gets something like 1000 miles of range, charges from 0-100% in 10 min, has half the rate of battery degradation, and costs $40,000? There are technologies which could potentially deliver these kinds of numbers, so don’t be too surprised if it happens.
I know people here that its a virtue signal. There saving the planet. There not too hoity about it - there just "I can't justify polluting the air", or " I won't give my money to big oil". Nothing wrong with saving the planet, I just don't think they really are.Oh not this nonsense again. I hear this enough, but I’ve never met the EV owner that cited the planet for buying the car. I remember stuff being said about that with the Prius early on, but I never met that person either.
I’m not saying that doesn’t exist. I’ve only heard it used as an insult in this sense of supposedly showing off. Just seems like another excuse to be offended by a person in an EV. It’s real though, because I get the finger from random people in traffic. It’s always a full size modified truck though which I thought was odd. I’m going to go out on a limb and say they’re the bigger attention seeker in that interaction, but I’m sure as a Tesla owner I’m the problem to that person.
I don’t know. I’ve never derived status from buying a car. Obviously rare, higher priced stand out. I used to have Jaguars but I paid less than $15k for those. Maybe someone was impressed. I just never gave that a thought. Maybe some are really worried about that?
Virtue signaling is just a dumb sounding term. That and woke. They just drive me nuts. Maybe people use it differently than I perceive, but it always seems to be yelled with vitriol so often. I get tired of hearing it.I know people here that its a virtue signal. There saving the planet. There not too hoity about it - there just "I can't justify polluting the air", or " I won't give my money to big oil". Nothing wrong with saving the planet, I just don't think they really are.
As for status symbol - what percentage of Tesla's sold are the lowest price Model 3? Probably not many. Model Y is the best selling Tesla and starts at $45K (less rebate) and thats the lowest level one there. So there not comparable to Jetta / Civic / Corolla. Cheapest BMW is $38K. No one buys them either.
So Status + green + preference = 8% of the market and flat-lining. Figures about right to me.
Possibly different where you are - but reality here. It makes no financial sense to drive an EV when gas is around $2.60 a gallon here still.