Tesla shares surge after unexpected profit

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Image copyrightGetty ImagesImage caption Mr Musk met Shanghai Mayor Ying Yong in January as work began on the new
Gigafactory 3 Tesla shares have surged to their highest levels since February, after it told investors that manufacturing at
the three months to 30 September.That beat forecasts, but was down more than 50% from a year earlier.Shares in the electric carmaker jumped
by more than 17% in after-hours trade to about $300 apiece.Tesla has struggled with years of losses, fuelling investor doubts and casting a
shadow over the shares in recent years
The firm has yet to turn an annual profit, although it recorded positive results in the final two quarters of 2018.Last year, the company
took aggressive steps to slash expense, cutting thousands of jobs and reining in other spending.Image copyrightGetty ImagesImage caption
The Gigafactory 3 under construction In the most recent quarter, operating expenses fell about 15%
year-on-year to $930m, lifting the firm's bottom line, despite a modest decline in revenue.In Wednesday's earnings release, the company said
it expected to remain profitable in the future with "possible temporary exceptions" around the launch of new products
The firm said it was "highly confident" it would deliver more than 360,000 vehicles this year - in line with previous estimates.The company
is betting on major success in China, the world's biggest car market
Sales there had been hurt by tariffs triggered by the US-China trade war.Tesla said trial production had already started at its factory in
Shanghai, the first wholly foreign-owned plant in the country
However, it still needs additional government sign-off before full production gets underway, it said."We have cleared initial milestones
toward our manufacturing license and are working towards finalising the license and meeting other governmental requirements," it said.