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When asked in April of this year for updated specs and pricing, Musk demurred, saying Tesla would save that information for a Cybertruck handover event he hoped to stage around the end of the third quarter. Image Credit: Bloomberg

New York: Almost four years after Elon Musk first unveiled Tesla’s debut pickup, the automaker has built its first Cybertruck.

Tesla shared the development on Twitter, posting a photo of workers in safety vests and helmets obscuring much of the vehicle. When Musk first showed a prototype of the wedge-shaped truck in November 2019, the plan was for production to start two years later.

Musk has tempered expectations for how quickly Tesla will ramp up production, telling shareholders at the company’s annual meeting in May that the Cybertruck’s radical design poses challenges. He’s said the body will be stainless steel, which can be expensive and difficult to shape and weld.

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“It’s going to be hard to make the cost affordable because it is a new car, new manufacturing method,” Musk said. “In the grand scheme of things, relative to the production rate of all the other cars we make, it will be small. But it’s still very cool.”

But in October 2021, the company removed pricing and specifications from its Cybertruck order page, without explanation.

When asked in April of this year for updated specs and pricing, Musk demurred, saying Tesla would save that information for a Cybertruck handover event he hoped to stage around the end of the third quarter.

Since Tesla unveiled the vehicle at an event marred by the botched demonstration of supposedly bulletproof glass, Ford Motor Co. introduced an electric version of its best-selling F-150, General Motors Co. began selling its GMC Hummer EV pickup, and Rivian Automotive launched its R1T truck.

Deutsche Bank analyst Emmanuel Rosner expects Tesla to deliver 2,000 Cybertrucks this year, a fraction of the 1.78 million vehicles he’s projecting in total. In a June 26 report, he questioned whether the product will boost the company’s profitability, citing the difficulty of optimizing production and need for larger battery packs to enable towing.

“This could layer on an additional headwind to margin in the back half” of the year, wrote Rosner, who rates Tesla stock a buy with a $260 price target. The shares closed Friday at $281.38 and have soared 128 per cent this year.

Tesla releases second-quarter earnings results on July 19.