A Good Problem To Have

If Elon wants something done right, he’s gotta do it himself. Demand for Tesla’s electric vehicles (EV) is far higher than the supply available and here’s the reason: lack of batteries. Tesla is taking things into its own hands by developing its own batteries.
Over the past few years, Tesla has hired several battery experts and acquired multiple battery manufacturers to supply their own batteries. On Oct. 2, Tesla made their next move by acquiring German battery maker, ATW Automation.
Experts expect the demand for EVs to grow 16x from 1.8m in 2019 to over 30m within 8 years. There are two big problems slowing growth: battery production and costs. Batteries account for 30% of an EV’s cost and that’s not even the biggest problem… suppliers can’t make enough batteries to keep up with the demand.
At the current rate, EV makers can only grow as fast as their suppliers. With more and more carmakers joining the EV race, battery supply will be even more limited. Which is why companies like General Motors and Volkswagen are investing billions into developing their own battery factories.
Tesla thinks it can develop batteries better than its current suppliers. Over the past few years, the company has completed several acquisitions to bring battery production in-house. This is bad news for Panasonic, who lost money over the last few years on its partnership to supply batteries for Tesla.
For investors… In the EV race, there’s Tesla and then there’s everyone else. The company is years ahead of its competitors with its battery technology and it plans to keep this advantage. Here’s what bringing their battery development in-house will do: