Cash burn increases for EV startups as demand weakens

Cash burn increases for EV startups as demand weakens

Aug 3 (Reuters) ‌- U.S. electric vehicle startups are expected to show the⁣ impact of Tesla’s price‍ war when they report quarterly results over the next few days, with investors awaiting details on how the companies are managing cash amid a funding drought.

Even market leader Tesla (TSLA.O)⁤ has warned of “turbulent times” and traditional automakers ⁣with deeper pockets including Ford Motor ‍(F.N) are losing money on EVs. The squeeze has already claimed its first casualty in electric truck maker Lordstown Motors ⁣(RIDEQ.PK), which filed for bankruptcy in June.

Companies including Lucid (LCID.O) and Nikola (NKLA.O) are likely to report another quarter of steep cash burn, as they continue⁢ to ‍struggle ⁣with production and demand.

“The only ones that‍ have a chance besides Musk are the legacy auto providers⁣ and so far ‌they are proving that they are losing money hand over fist trying to ​get into the EV ​game,” said Thomas Hayes, ‍chairman of hedge fund Great Hill Capital. Hayes follows the EV industry closely but holds no shares.

The one ⁤standout seems to be Amazon-backed Rivian Automotive (RIVN.O), which is ‌likely to report a three-fold surge in revenue to $983.1 million for the April-June quarter.

The company’s cash outflow likely slowed to $1.19 billion in ⁣the second quarter, down by ‌about $600 million from the January-March period, according to ⁤13 analysts polled by Visible Alpha. Gross margins likely improved to a negative 51.3% ⁢from negative 58.6%.

“Rivian’s ⁢competitive advantages are shining brighter, with the ‌company emerging as a demand creator when considering that the majority of its ⁣buyers have never previously purchased a pickup truck,”⁣ Needham analyst Chris Pierce said.

At least 8 analysts ⁤have raised their price⁣ target on the company’s stock, which has gained about 40% so far this year.

Reuters Graphics

Lucid, which is majority owned by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, is expected to report deepening losses on Monday after it ‍reported a fall in April-June production due to supply-chain problems.

It is set to post a cash balance of $2.76‌ billion for the April-June period, up from $900 million in the prior three months, after it announced ‍a fundraise of about $3 billion, according to six analysts polled by⁤ Visible Alpha.

Nikola, which reiterated a going-concern warning in May, is expected to report a⁣ 15% decline in revenue and widening losses on Friday.

Its shares have ⁣rallied nearly 40% this year⁢ as ‌the company attempts ⁤to reduce its⁢ cash burn with layoffs and the liquidation of a recently acquired battery business. However, ‍that may still not be enough to ⁣meet its funding needs, analysts have said.

Fisker (FSR.N), which has healthy cash‍ reserves and an aggressive profitability​ goal, is expected to report on Friday its first revenue from vehicle sales after the firm started deliveries of‌ its Ocean SUVs in the June quarter.

But the⁣ company missed its production target in the quarter due to a parts shortage.

Investors will be keen to ⁢see Fisker’s…

Post from www.reuters.com

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