Anonymous
Post 03/21/2025 12:09     Subject: Tesla's Missing 1.4 billion

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:We need to send in DOGE there


He gets many of his DOGE hires from Tesla/Space X and people are constantly correcting the lies they put up about the amounts they're "saving" the US taxpayers. They're citing contracts that don't exist from 2004 and mixing up millions and thousands.


It's meant tobe a distraction. But we are going to pay the price.
Anonymous
Post 03/21/2025 12:06     Subject: Tesla's Missing 1.4 billion

Anonymous wrote:We need to send in DOGE there


He gets many of his DOGE hires from Tesla/Space X and people are constantly correcting the lies they put up about the amounts they're "saving" the US taxpayers. They're citing contracts that don't exist from 2004 and mixing up millions and thousands.
Anonymous
Post 03/21/2025 11:27     Subject: Tesla's Missing 1.4 billion

Musk is driving down the price of TSLA to take it private.
Anonymous
Post 03/21/2025 11:23     Subject: Tesla's Missing 1.4 billion

Anonymous wrote:We need to send in DOGE there


Yes, they can cut expenses and employees and even more Teslas can be recalled/blow up. Plus DOGE also have problems distinguishing between pesky millions and billions on their website.
Anonymous
Post 03/21/2025 11:15     Subject: Tesla's Missing 1.4 billion

We need to send in DOGE there
Anonymous
Post 03/21/2025 11:05     Subject: Tesla's Missing 1.4 billion

Their independent auditor is PWC.

Vaibhav Taneja is their CFO.
Anonymous
Post 03/21/2025 10:48     Subject: Tesla's Missing 1.4 billion

Not Enron, but it is eerily similar to WorldCom.
Anonymous
Post 03/21/2025 10:45     Subject: Tesla's Missing 1.4 billion

How do Tesla accountants not account for 1.4 billion on their financial statements? Is this an Enron type situation? I'm also curious who is auditing their financial statements and how they don't catch this.

https://www.ft.com/content/62df8d8d-31f2-445e-bfa2-c171ac43db6e

The Financial Times compared the electric automaker’s capital expenditure in the last six months of 2024 to its valuation of the assets that money was spent on, and discovered that $1.4 billion has “gone astray.”
Looking at last year, in the third and fourth quarter combined, Tesla spent $6.3bn on “purchases of property and equipment excluding finance leases, net of sales” according to its cashflow statements. Over on the balance sheet, however, the gross value of property, plant and equipment rose by only $4.9bn in that period, to $51bn.

$6.9 billion minus $4.9 billion equals $1.4 billion, or the sum the paper says appears unaccounted for. It’s a bit complicated, but unless Tesla reports the missing money in its next earnings report, it could indicate that something fishy is going on — beyond a stock collapse amid a global protest movement.