Tesla: Probers subpoenaed production data

FILE- This Oct. 3, 2018, file photo shows the logo of Tesla Model 3 at the Auto show in Paris. U.S. securities investigators have subpoenaed information from Tesla about production forecasts for the Model 3 electric car that were made last year, the company acknowledged in a regulatory filing Friday, Nov. 2. The disclosure in Tesla’s quarterly financial report also says the Securities and Exchange Commission subpoena covered other public statements made about Model 3 production. The filing also says Tesla is cooperating with a Justice Department request for information about production. (AP Photo/Christophe Ena, File)
FILE- This Oct. 3, 2018, file photo shows the logo of Tesla Model 3 at the Auto show in Paris. U.S. securities investigators have subpoenaed information from Tesla about production forecasts for the Model 3 electric car that were made last year, the company acknowledged in a regulatory filing Friday, Nov. 2. The disclosure in Tesla’s quarterly financial report also says the Securities and Exchange Commission subpoena covered other public statements made about Model 3 production. The filing also says Tesla is cooperating with a Justice Department request for information about production. (AP Photo/Christophe Ena, File)

DETROIT -- U.S. securities investigators have subpoenaed information from Tesla about production forecasts for the Model 3 electric car that were made last year, the company acknowledged in a regulatory filing Friday.

The disclosure in Tesla's quarterly financial report also says the Securities and Exchange Commission subpoena covered other public statements made about Model 3 production.

The filing adds that Tesla is cooperating with a Justice Department request for information about Model 3 forecasts.

It's the first time Tesla has formally disclosed the SEC subpoena in a regulatory filing, but there have been widespread news reports about its investigation into production forecasts.

The Model 3 is a central part of Tesla's plan to expand from a niche player in the luxury segment to a carmaker with broader appeal. It's also key to the company's cash flow and pledge to make quarterly net profits into the future. In 2017 and this year, Tesla had trouble producing the cars, drawing a lawsuit from investors who said they were misled by Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk's production targets.

Early last year, the Palo Alto, Calif., company announced plans to produce up to 5,000 Model 3s a week by the end of 2017. But the company fell far short because of problems with automation at its Fremont, Calif., factory, making just 793 in the last week of 2017 and 2,700 for the entire year. It didn't hit the 5,000-a-week target until June this year.

The Wall Street Journal reported last month that the FBI has opened a criminal investigation into whether Tesla misled investors by overstating Model 3 production forecasts.

Tesla Inc. says in the filing that to its knowledge, no government agency in an ongoing investigation has determined that it did anything wrong.

A company spokesman wouldn't comment beyond the filing. Neither the Justice Department nor the SEC would comment Friday.

In September, Tesla settled a civil lawsuit by the SEC over tweets by Musk that funding was in place to take the company private. Musk and Tesla agreed to pay a combined $40 million without acknowledging or denying wrongdoing.

"Aside from the settlement with the SEC relating to Mr. Musk's statement that he was considering taking Tesla private, there have not been any developments in these matters that we deem to be material," the company wrote in the filing.

But the company also says that if the government decides to take enforcement action, "there exists the possibility of a material adverse impact on our business, results of operation, prospects, cash flows, and financial position."

Last month, Tesla reported a $311.5 million profit for the July-through-September period, its first quarterly profit in two years.

Business on 11/03/2018

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