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    Tesla offers rare year-end discounts on two top-selling models

    DETROIT (AP) – Tesla Inc is offering rare discounts through year’s end on its two top-selling models, an indication that demand is slowing for its electric vehicles (EVs).

    The Austin, Texas, company started offering a USD3,750 incentive on its Model 3 sedan and Model Y SUV on its website earlier this month, but on Wednesday doubled the discount to USD7,500 for those who take delivery between now and December 31.

    The move comes ahead of a new federal tax credit of up to USD7,500 that’s scheduled to take effect on January 1. Teslas weren’t eligible for a previous federal tax credit programme because the company had reached a limit of 200,000 vehicles sold. Next year’s credits don’t have such a limit.

    “This is a sign of demand cracks and not a good sign for Tesla heading into the December year-end,” Wedbush analyst Dan Ives said in an e-mail. “EV competition is increasing across the board, and Tesla is seeing some demand headwinds.”

    Lower priced versions of the Models 3 and Y will be eligible for the federal tax credit come January due to limits on vehicle purchase prices outlined in the Inflation Reduction Act.

    Without the discounts, the Model 3 starts at just over USD48,000 including shipping, while the Y has a starting price of just over USD67,000. To be eligible for the federal tax credit, vehicles can’t have a sticker price of over USD55,000 for sedans and USD80,000 for trucks and SUVs.

    Tesla’s company logo outside a Tesla store in Cherry Creek Mall in Denver. PHOTO: AP

    In a regulatory quirk, many vehicles like Teslas that are made in North America likely will be eligible for the full USD7,500 tax credit from January into March because the Treasury Department is still working on rules requiring battery minerals and parts to come from North America. It’s likely that most of the vehicles will only be eligible for half the credit once the rules come out in March.

    Tesla may be offering the discounts to juice sales before the end of the year in an effort to meet a pledge to grow vehicle sales by 50 per cent.

    On the company’s third-quarter earnings conference call in October, Tesla CFO Zachary Kirkhorn said Tesla will fall just short of its 50 per cent sales growth target. But he later was contradicted by CEO Elon Musk.

    Musk predicted 50 per cent annual production and delivery growth, but also pointed to logistical problems shipping vehicles.

    To reach the 50 per cent sales growth target, Tesla must have a stellar performance in the fourth quarter.

    Through September the company delivered 908,573 vehicles, compared with just over 936,000 vehicles a year ago. To increase sales by 50 per cent over last year, which would amount to about 1.4 million vehicles, the company would have to sell more than 490,000 vehicles in the fourth quarter.

    Industry analysts polled by data provider FactSet expect Tesla to deliver 431,000 vehicles in the fourth quarter, ending the year at 1,341 million.

    Tesla shares have lost more than 60 per cent of their value since Musk announced in April that he had taken a large stake in Twitter. They fell nearly nine per cent on Thursday, closing at USD125.35 after United States safety regulators said they would probe two more Tesla crashes possibly involving automated driving systems.

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