Donald Trump and Subsidies: New Wrinkle for Elon Musk's Tesla-SolarCity Plans
November 17 2016 - 10:29AM
Dow Jones News
By Cassandra Sweet
Shareholders set to vote on Thursday over the merger of Tesla
Motors Inc. and SolarCity Corp. have a new dilemma to consider: How
Donald Trump's election will affect subsidies for green power.
The electric-car and rooftop-solar companies controlled by Elon
Musk rely on federal clean-energy tax credits and rebates to drive
down the costs of what they sell.
Buyers of Tesla cars can obtain a $7,500 federal tax credit for
purchasing an all-electric vehicle, for example, while SolarCity
customers are eligible for federal tax credits equal to 30% of the
price of their solar energy system.
Mr. Trump's election, combined with Republican control of
Congress, is likely to lead to federal policies that favor
conventional energy over renewables, some analysts predict.
And current electric-car and solar subsidies are scheduled to
decline over time and are unlikely to be renewed or extended under
the Trump administration, said Jeffrey Osborne, an analyst at Cowen
& Co. "Now, with the potential for the tax credits to go away,
[SolarCity has] to accelerate their work on cost reductions and
[reaching] grid parity," Mr. Osborne said.
Mr. Trump has vowed to repeal the Clean Power Plan, the Obama
administration's main climate-change initiative that calls for a
32% reduction in power-plant carbon emissions from 2005 levels by
2030. The plan, which is on hold pending a federal court challenge
by some coal companies and states, was widely expected to boost
solar and wind power development nationwide.
Under the current federal electric-vehicle subsidy, the $7,500
federal tax credit for buying an electric vehicle is set to drop by
half to $3,750 once an auto maker, such as Tesla, sells its
200,000th electric car in the U.S.
Tesla doesn't release data for its U.S. car sales. But it has
delivered 160,000 vehicles world-wide to date, including more than
54,000 this year. Tesla said last May it planned to deliver between
80,000 and 90,000 cars this year.
The reduction of the tax credit is unlikely to damp consumer
demand for Tesla's vehicles, according to the company.
Federal solar investment-tax credits that buyers of solar panels
receive are scheduled to drop to 26% of the sales price in 2020
from 30% now. In 2022, they are set to fall to 10% for commercial
customers and zero for residential customers. SolarCity said the
solar industry is focused on reducing costs to offset the scheduled
decline in incentives.
In addition to federal subsidies, Tesla and SolarCity also
benefit from state-level programs to boost clean energy sources
that are not directly affected by changes in Washington . Tesla for
example recently reported that it eked out a third quarter profit
of $22 million, thanks in part to receiving $139 million from
zero-emission vehicle credits it obtained and sold to other auto
manufacturers. California and nine other states offer the credits
to makers of electric cars.
Since first proposing to combine Tesla and SolarCity in June,
Mr. Musk has faced questions over whether the amalgamation in
effect amounted to a bailout of the struggling home solar equipment
installer and whether melding two money-losing entities made
sense.
Tesla lost $889 million in 2015 and $294 million the previous
year. The company's $22 million third-quarter profit compared with
a loss of $230 million a year earlier. Still, analysts polled by
FactSet are expecting the company to post another loss for all of
this year.
SolarCity lost $769 million in 2015, after losing $375 million
the year before. Analysts expect the company to post another net
loss for this year. The company posted a third-quarter net loss of
$225 million, 4% less from a year earlier and less than analysts
had expected. However, it also cut its forecast for the volume of
panels it expects to install this year to the equivalent of 900
megawatts from 1,250 megawatts earlier this year.
Shareholders will decide the merger's outcome in a meeting at 1
p.m. Pacific Time or 4 p.m. Eastern on Thursday in Fremont,
Calif.
Cowen & Co.'s Mr. Osborne expects Tesla and SolarCity
shareholders to approve the deal.
Two shareholder proxy services have differing opinions about the
proposed merger. Institutional Shareholder Services Inc. endorsed
it earlier this month, saying it was needed to create an integrated
sustainable energy company. But rival firm Glass Lewis & Co.,
urged shareholders to vote no, calling it a "thinly veiled bailout"
for SolarCity. Mr. Musk is the chairman and largest shareholder of
both companies.
Shares of Tesla closed Wednesday at $183.93, off 23% this year.
SolarCity shares closed at $19.83, down 61% this year.
Write to Cassandra Sweet at cassandra.sweet@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
November 17, 2016 10:14 ET (15:14 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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