A decision Monday by Saudi Arabia and Russia, the world’s largest oil exporters, to cut production in an effort to push up oil prices is a bullish development for the Club’s struggling energy holdings. Saudi Arabia, the de-facto head of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, said it would extend a voluntary oil-output cut of 1 million barrels a day through August. The cartel’s key oil-producing ally, Russia — part of a larger group of producers known as OPEC+ — said it would reduce its oil exports by 500,000 barrels a day next month. Oil prices edged up Monday, with West Texas Intermediate crude — the U.S. oil benchmark — rising by 0.28%, to just under $71 a barrel. WTI has fallen nearly 15% from its 2023 high in April. The Club’s oil-services firm, Haliburton (HAL) — which is down nearly 14% year-to-date — soared 2.7% Monday morning, to nearly $34 a share. Exploration-and-production names Pioneer Natural Resources (PXD) and Coterra Energy (CTRA) edged up slightly. Monday’s decision stands to benefit our three oil stocks mainly because higher energy prices should translate into greater free-cash-flow generation for these companies — a portion of which gets returned to shareholders like us through stock buybacks of dividends. Still, the move by the Saudis and Russians comes amid worries over a slowing global economy and ahead of another potential round of interest-rate hikes from the U.S. Federal Reserve to combat still-persistent inflation. And, at the same time, global oil demand has been held back by China’ slower-than-expected post-Covid economic recovery. In this uncertain economic environment, the U.S. has repeatedly made clear its desire to keep oil prices lower. That could incentivize additional drilling at home, given more domestic production could offset efforts by OPEC+ to push prices up through supply cuts. Nonetheless, while output cuts may be supportive of oil momentarily, we’re skeptical that they alone can do much to materially increase crude prices. Rather, we suspect that a rebound in U.S. economic growth and an acceleration in the Chinese recovery will be key for the increased demand needed to take energy prices a leg higher. A more positive outlook for economic activity would not only benefit oil prices but could also lead to a rotation away from the sectors that have led equities markets to the upside all year — namely, technology, communication services and consumer discretionary. In that case, investment dollars would likely flow into energy, financials and industrials. But if energy prices were to remain relatively suppressed, we would expect the year-to-date winners to continue their march higher, benefiting from more affordable oil prices. Either way, a diversified portfolio will carry us through whatever the second half of the year has in store. (Jim Cramer’s Charitable Trust is long HAL, PXD, CTRA. See here for a full list of the stocks.) As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust’s portfolio. If Jim has talked about a stock on CNBC TV, he waits 72 hours after issuing the trade alert before executing the trade. THE ABOVE INVESTING CLUB INFORMATION IS SUBJECT TO OUR TERMS AND CONDITIONS AND PRIVACY POLICY , TOGETHER WITH OUR DISCLAIMER . NO FIDUCIARY OBLIGATION OR DUTY EXISTS, OR IS CREATED, BY VIRTUE OF YOUR RECEIPT OF ANY INFORMATION PROVIDED IN CONNECTION WITH THE INVESTING CLUB. NO SPECIFIC OUTCOME OR PROFIT IS GUARANTEED.
An offshore drilling platform stands in shallow waters at the Manifa offshore oilfield, operated by Saudi Aramco, in Manifa, Saudi Arabia, on Wednesday, Oct. 3, 2018.
Simon Dawson | Bloomberg | Getty Images
A decision Monday by Saudi Arabia and Russia, the world’s largest oil exporters, to cut production in an effort to push up oil prices is a bullish development for the Club’s struggling energy holdings.
Tesla has started to offer discounted financing on Cybertruck as the electric pickup truck undoubtedly turns out to be a flop.
Tesla claimed over 1 million reservations for the Cybertruck, and CEO Elon Musk said he could see Tesla producing 500,000 units per year.
However, that was before Tesla announced that the production version would be much more expensive and have a shorter range than what was initially announced.
The Cybertruck has now been in production for a year and a half, and it looks like Tesla would be lucky to sell about 10% of Musk’s goal of 500,000 units.
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The automaker doesn’t report Cybertruck sales, but it is estimated that Tesla delivered roughly 40,000 Cybertrucks in 2024, and it is expected to have even more issues selling the truck this year.
It is very possible that Tesla can’t sell more than 10,000 Cybertrucks this quarter, which would extrapolate to 40,000 units per year or less than 10% of what Elon said he would see Tesla delivering.
Now, the cheaper single motor Cybertruck should help, but by how much? It could bring Tesla to 20-30% of the volume Elon saw possible?
I think it’s fairly clear that the Cybertruck is a flop.
Tesla launched a single new vehicle in the last 5 years and it is a flop.
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Toyota looks to grab a bigger share of the world’s largest EV market as it takes aim at BYD and other low-cost leaders. On Thursday, Toyota launched its cheapest EV in China, the bZ3X, starting at roughly $15,000. The new electric SUV crashed the server with over 10,000 orders in an hour.
Meet Toyota’s cheapest EV in China, the bZ3X
The bz3X is Toyota’s “first 100,000 yuan-level pure electric SUV” in China and its cheapest EV to hit the market so far.
Toyota’s Chinese joint venture, GAC-Toyota officially launched the “Bozhi 3X,” or bZ3X for short, in China on March 6. Shortly after, the company said orders for its new electric SUV were “so popular that the server crashed” after revealing prices start at just over $15,000 (109,800 yuan).
After securing over 10,000 orders in just one hour, Toyota boasted again that “the server is overwhelmed.” The launch comes after blind pre-orders opened in December, starting at just under $14,000 (100,000 yuan).
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The bZ3X is available in two versions, with or without its full-scenario smart driving tech. The non-smart tech model starts at 109,800 yuan ($15,000) with five trim options while the smart driving model starts at 149,800 yuan ($20,500).
Toyota launches its cheapest EV in China, the bZ3X (Source: GAC-Toyota)
For 159,800 yuan ($22,000), the range-topping “610 Max” trim provides up to 610 km (379 miles) CLTC range from a 67.92 kWh LFP battery. The base “430 Air” gets up to 430 km (267 miles) from a 50.03 kWh LFP battery pack.
Toyota said the interior provides “a mobile space that is comfortable as home,” with front and rear seats that can fold down to provide nearly 10 feet (3 meters) of space.
Inside, the electric SUV has a 14.6″ infotainment screen with voice recognition and an 8.8″ driver display. It also includes a two-spoke multi-function steering wheel.
Toyota’s new bZ3X is its first vehicle with the Momenta 5.0 Intelligent Driving System. Powered by NVIDIA Drive AGX Orin X, it comes with 25 ADAS features, such as parallel parking, remote control parking, high-speed pilot, light traffic assist, and blind spot monitoring.
GAC-Toyota claimed it will be “one of the first automakers in the world to realize a one-stage end-to-end intelligent driving model.” With human-like intelligence, the vehicle “gets smarter and better with use.”
At 4,600 mm long, 1,875 mm wide, and 1,645 mm tall, Toyota’s cheapest EV in China is about the size of BYD’s Yuan Plus (Atto 3) at 4,455 mm long, 1,875 mm wide, and 1,615 mm tall. Starting at 115,800 yuan ($16,000), Toyota’s new bZ3X slightly undercuts BYD’s electric SUV.
What do you think of Toyota’s new electric SUV? Would you buy one for around $15,000? We’ll keep dreaming.
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It’s been a big day for big reveals with the all-new Volvo ES90, a new compact electric city car from Volkswagen, plus a pair of new, over-the-top EVs from General Motors that perfectly exemplify American excess. All this and maybe the dawn of the long-awaited “Tesla Killer” on today’s revealing episode of Quick Charge!
GM is practically daring the competition to build a bigger, badder EV with a new, bigger $133,000 Cadillac Escalade and 1,100 hp off-road special in the form of the new Chevrolet Silverado EV ZR2. Finally, you guys are never happy … try to enjoy this episode, anyway!
New episodes of Quick Charge are recorded, usually, Monday through Thursday (and sometimes Sunday). We’ll be posting bonus audio content from time to time as well, so be sure to follow and subscribe so you don’t miss a minute of Electrek’s high-voltage daily news.
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