U.S. electric-vehicle startups set for another quarter of steep cash
burn
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[May 06, 2023] By
Akash Sriram
(Reuters) - U.S. electric-vehicle startups are expected to report
another quarter of dwindling cash reserves next week, piling pressure on
a group of companies that are struggling to ramp up production and have
few options for funding in a turbulent economy.
Having gone public with hopes of shaking up the automobile industry,
these companies have seen their market valuations evaporate in the past
few months as EV demand slows and market leader Tesla Inc cuts prices to
stoke orders.
Lucid Group kicks off first-quarter earnings for the group on Monday,
with the company expected to report a 36% sequential slide in cash
reserves, according to Visible Alpha.
Rivian Automotive, meanwhile, will likely report on Tuesday that its
cash balance fell by 6.8% to $10.78 billion from the preceding quarter,
per a Visible Alpha estimate.
The Amazon.com Inc-backed firm, whose shares have declined by nearly a
quarter this year, is also expected to report a larger loss of $1.75
billion as both deliveries and production fell in the period. It posted
a $1.59 billion loss a year ago.
Fisker Inc and Nikola, both of which report earnings on Tuesday, are
expected to see their cash reserves decline by 5% and 15%, respectively,
according to Visible Alpha.
"Any company that's losing money with a low valuation is toast and EVs
are no exception. I think it is just a slow bleed. Maybe they'll get
lucky and some of their technologies maybe bought by bigger players,"
said Thomas Hayes, chairman of hedge fund Great Hill Capital.
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Visitors check a Tesla Model 3 car next
to a Model Y displayed at a showroom of the U.S. electric vehicle (EV)
maker in Beijing, China February 4, 2023. REUTERS/Florence Lo/File
Photo/File Photo
A drop in valuations of companies has rendered selling equity for
precious cash more ineffective and investors are becoming
increasingly unhappy with their stake being diluted as several
startups are yet to recognize revenue from operations.
British EV startup Arrival SA and Nikola have issued going-concern
warnings in the past few months, with the former set to merge with
blank-check firm Kensington Capital Acquisition Corp in a bid to
raise cash.
Lordstown Motors said this week it could be forced to file for
bankruptcy due to uncertainty over a funding deal with major
shareholder Foxconn. Its earnings in an unscheduled release on
Thursday showed Lordstown's cash balance fell 11% sequentially.
Some of the companies including Lucid and Rivian have also said they
would not provide data on reservation numbers going forward,
sparking some concern among investors.
It is a "disturbing development," CFRA Research analyst Garrett
Nelson said. "What we've seen is a trend of less transparency in the
reservation count, but overall competition is a big problem," he
added.
(Reporting by Akash Sriram in Bengaluru; Editing by Aditya Soni and
Maju Samuel)
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