Tag Archives: Lordstown Motors

Toyota Sales are Going From Bad to Worse

Photo: Toshifumi Kitamura/AFP (Getty Images)

Toyota is seeing its sales go from bad to worse as supply chain issues take hold, EV startup Lordstown Motors saw its first ever profit, and Boeing workers at three U.S. plants agreed on a new contract. All that and more in The Morning Shift for August 4, 2022.

1st Gear: Toyota Sales Drop 42 Percent

It’s a tough time to be a carmaker, as supply chain issues, lockdowns caused by the pandemic and the threat of a recession linger over us all. For Toyota, this triple-pronged assault has hit its sales. Hard.

After seeing a 30 percent drop in volume sales in 2021, the automaker has now reported a 42 percent drop in profits for the first quarter of its latest fiscal year. Clearly, things are going from not great to substantially worse for the Japanese firm. According to Reuters:

“Toyota Motor Corp’s profit slumped a worse-than-expected 42% in its first quarter as the Japanese automaker was squeezed between supply constraints and rising costs.

“Operating profit for the three months ended June 30 sank to 578.66 billion yen ($4.3 billion) from 997.4 billion yen in the same period a year ago, Toyota said on Thursday, capping a tough period. It has repeatedly cut monthly output goals due to the global chip shortage and Covid-19 curbs on plants in China.”

The scale of its plummeting profits was “far beyond expectations.” Despite bringing new models to the market this quarter, like the electric BZ4X, rising production costs and parts shortages had a big impact on the firm’s sales.

Toyota claimed that rising material prices have cost it 315 billion yen ($2.36bn).

But the carmaker doesn’t think these bad fortunes will be around forever. A spokesperson for Toyota told Reuters that production would pick up in the second half of the year. The company also stuck to its forecast for full-year operating profits and reaffirmed its ambitions to produce 9.7 million vehicles this financial year.

2nd Gear: Lordstown Motors Reports its First Profit

But while Toyota was witnessing a dramatic drop in income, an unlikely EV maker had posted its first ever profit. Troubled startup Lordstown Motors reported a profit in the first quarter of this year after it sold assets including its Ohio assembly line to Taiwanese contract manufacturer Foxconn. Reuters reports:

“The EV company recorded a gain of more than $100 million in the April-June quarter from the Ohio asset sale, which was prompted by the need for funding amid industry-wide supply chain disruptions and rising material costs.

“That helped it post a net income of $63.7 million, compared with a loss of $108.2 million a year earlier.”

The EV maker claims its all-electric Endurance pickup truck will definitely, maybe, make it into production later this year. But earlier this year, the automaker warned that it was burning through cash at an alarming rate.

In 2021, Lordstown Motors had $587 million in reserve, with which it was developing and building the all-electric truck. But by March this year, that figure had fallen to just $203.6 million. The sale of its Ohio plant to Foxconn was thought to offer a short-term boost to the firm as it neared the final hurdles of getting its truck on the road.

3rd Gear: Subaru Is Doing Fine, Actually

Lordstown Motors wasn’t the only car maker with something positive to share this morning. Japanese firm Subaru saw its profits rise 24 percent in its latest quarter as the company “​recovered lost production, ramped up sales and cashed in on favorable exchange rates,” according to Automotive News.

The site reports that Subaru’s operating profit reached ¥37 billion ($271.3 million) in the fiscal first quarter ended June 30. Subaru said this rise was as a result of rising sales as it “gradually overcame crimped production from the Covid-19 pandemic and global semiconductor shortage.” From Automotive News:

“Global output increased 12 percent to 205,000 vehicles in the April-June period, helping drive a 12 percent increase in worldwide sales to 196,000 vehicles. The rebound helped Subaru gain its footing after struggling to fill the product pipeline amid strong demand for its products.

“The biggest boost to Subaru’s earnings, however, came from a windfall from the Japanese yen’s dramatic weakening against foreign currencies, especially the U.S. dollar.”

As the firm’s fortunes continue to rebound following the struggles of the pandemic, Subaru CFO Katsuyuki Mizuma has also quashed talk of recession in the U.S. Mizuma claimed that demand for Subaru vehicles “remains robust” in America, and said the company was “racing to fill some 50,000 back orders” over here.

Mizuma warned that limited output remains Subaru’s biggest hurdle.

4th Gear: Toyota Will Buy Back Your EV

Earlier this year, Toyota made a big song and dance about its first EV, the BZ4X, which was produced in partnership with Subaru. The electric SUV has proven pretty popular, and Toyota has so far delivered almost 3,000 to customers in the U.S. But, its rollout has been hit with issues, and now the company is offering to buy back vehicles affected by a recall.

After just two months on sale, Toyota announced a recall of the BZ4X thanks to faulty wheels, which it said could come off the car while you’re driving. Not a great start to Toyota’s battery-powered future.

Now, according to Electrek, the firm is offering to buy back faulty models as its recall continues to falter. The site says:

“Toyota announced the bZ4X recall in late June, citing a potential for the new EV’s wheels to fall off. Though it did apply to all bZ4Xs produced, since it happened soon after the car’s launch, it is still a relatively small recall – only 2,700 vehicles.

“Now owners are getting letters from Toyota corporate detailing the specifics of what Toyota is offering in exchange for the trouble of this recall, and given the scope of the offer, it doesn’t seem like the recall is going great.”

The letter, seen by Electrek, asks owners not to drive their EVs while Toyota seeks a remedy to the issue.

While it investigates a fix, Toyota will store recalled vehicles and offer loaner cars to affected customers. The automaker will also reimburse fuel costs for the loaned car, and will even repurchase the vehicle if you don’t like the sound of its solutions.

Electrek says the problem also affects Subaru’s Solterra, but it is not believed that deliveries of this model have started in the U.S. yet.

5th Gear: Boeing Workers Agree New Contract

Just weeks after threatening strike action, Boeing workers at three U.S. factories have called off industrial action and agreed a new contract. More than 2,500 workers at the aerospace giant’s sites in the Midwest voted to ratify a contract that their union said will raise pay by “an average of 14 percent over three years and add inflation adjustments.”

The Associated Press reports that members of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers at Boeing plants in St. Louis and St. Charles, Missouri, and Mascoutah, Illinois, agreed to the contract earlier this week. According to the site:

“The union said the new contract includes a provision from the rejected deal that calls for company contributions of up to 10% to employees’ 401(k) retirement plans, and it added a $8,000 lump-sum payment that can go into the employee’s account. It also has improvements for sick leave and parental leave, and makes no changes to the workers’ health insurance plans, according to the union.”

The sites in question center around Boeing’s military operation. While the firm has struggled to fill order books for its commercial jets amid the ongoing pandemic, its defense and space business has been booming.

The AP reports that through the first six months of this year, this sector accounted for about 38% of Boeing’s total revenue.

Reverse: This Happened

Neutral: I’m Hungry

I feel like I’ve not yet tapped the full potential of America’s snack market. I was driving over the weekend and took some cheesy popcorn, peanut butter cups and grapes out on the road with me, but I’m not sure they’re very good driving snacks. What do you stock up on before hitting the roads?

Read original article here

Lordstown Motors Stock Is Soaring Because It Has a New CEO

Text size

Lordstown will begin production of its Endurance electric truck later this year.


Matthew Hatcher/Bloomberg

Electric truck start-up

Lordstown Motors

has a new CEO. Investors reacted with relief.

The company named Daniel Ninivaggi as its new CEO Thursday morning, effective immediately. Lordstown (ticker: RIDE) shares are up 25% to $6.88 in early trading. The

S&P 500

is down 0.1%. The

Dow Jones Industrial Average

is up 0.2%.

Ninivaggi takes over from board chair Angela Strand, who ran the company after the departure of Steve Burns in June. Burns left shortly after the company received a “going concern” warning from its auditor. That warning, essentially, means the company might not have the capital required to keep operating without a significant change.

The company is also being investigated by the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Justice Department regarding the handling of its SPAC merger and recording of vehicle pre-orders. Vehicle pre-orders were an issue raised in a negative research report by a short seller in March.

Lordstown stock hit a 52-week low on Aug. 19. Shares have rallied off the bottom and, including Thursday’s gains, are up about 44% from a nadir of $4.77 a share. Still, shares are off about 80% from their 52-week high of almost $32.

Ninivaggi is the former CEO of

Icahn Enterprises

(IEP) and has served in a “variety of senior leadership positions in the automotive and transportation industries,” according to the company. His previous automotive jobs include stints at parts suppliers

Lear

(LEA) and Federal-Mogul. He also serves on the board of

Garrett Motion

(GTX), the turbocharger business spun out of

Honeywell International

(HON).

“I believe the demand for full-size electric pickup trucks will be strong and the Endurance truck…has the opportunity to capture a meaningful share of the market,” said Ninivaggi. The Endurance, Lordstown’s first product, is due to start production in the coming months. “I look forward to working with the talented Lordstown management team, our suppliers and other partners to bring the Endurance to market and maximize the value of our assets.”

Ninivaggi will have a tough job. Wall Street has soured on Lordstown stock. Only one out of eight analysts, or 13%, rates shares Buy. The average Buy-rating ratio for small-capitalization stocks is about 60%. What’s more, 50% rate shares Sell. The average price target of the sell-rated analysts is about $1.55 a share.

Write to Al Root at allen.root@dowjones.com

Read original article here

Short Sellers Boost Bets Against SPACs

Short sellers are coming for SPACs.

Investors who bet against stocks are targeting special-purpose acquisition companies, one of the hottest growth areas on Wall Street. The dollar value of bearish bets against shares of SPACs has more than tripled to about $2.7 billion from $724 million at the start of the year, according to data from S3 Partners.

Some of the stocks under attack belong to large SPACs that surged in recent months, in part because they were backed by high-profile financiers. A blank-check company created by venture capitalist

Chamath Palihapitiya

that plans to merge with lending startup Social Finance Inc. is a popular target, with 19% of its shares outstanding sold short, according to data from S&P Global Market Intelligence. The short interest in

Churchill Capital Corp. IV,

a SPAC created by former investment banker

Michael Klein

that is merging with electric-vehicle startup Lucid, more than doubled in March to about 5%.

Others are wagering against companies after they combine with SPACs. Muddy Waters Capital LLC announced last week it was betting against

XL Fleet Corp.

, a fleet electrification company that went public in December after merging with a SPAC. XL has since said Muddy Waters’s report, which alleged XL inflated its sales pipeline and made misleading claims about its technology among other issues, had “numerous inaccuracies.” 

XL’s stock price dropped the day Muddy Waters released its report by about 13%, to $13.86, from its prior close on March 2. Shares closed Friday at $12.79.

Shares of

Lordstown Motors Corp.

fell nearly 17% Friday after Hindenburg Research released a report saying the electric-truck startup had misled investors on its orders and production. The company, which merged with a SPAC in October, said the report contained half-truths and lies. The short interest in Lordstown shares rose to 5% from 3.4% in the week before the report’s publication, according to data from S&P.

“SPACs are an area of focus,” said Muddy Waters’s

Carson Block.

The veteran short seller said SPACs largely make up the universe of companies he views as both “abysmal” and relatively free from technical challenges, such as high short interest, which can make betting against them difficult.

SPACs are shell firms that raise capital by issuing stock with the sole purpose of buying or merging with a private company to take it public. They are dominating the market for new stock issues, becoming a status symbol for celebrities while pumping the value of acquisitions, like betting company

DraftKings Inc.,

into the tens of billions of dollars.

Hedge funds that buy into SPACs early see them as a way to make lofty returns without much risk. Individual investors are attracted by the chance to get positions in newly public companies that they could rarely purchase through traditional IPOs. The Securities and Exchange Commission issued a statement on Wednesday warning that it “is never a good idea to invest in a SPAC just because someone famous sponsors or invests in it.”

A monthslong rally in the stocks lost steam recently amid a broad selloff in technology and high-growth companies. An index of SPAC stocks operated by Indxx fell about 17% from mid-February to March 10, while the Nasdaq Composite Index declined about 7.3% over the same period.

“These are all momentum stocks, and a lot of people want to short them,” said

Matthew Tuttle,

whose firm Tuttle Tactical Management runs an exchange-traded fund that allows investors to hold a portfolio of SPAC stocks. Mr. Tuttle is preparing to launch an ETF that bets against “de-SPAC” stocks of companies that have merged with a SPAC—like electric-truck manufacturer

Nikola Corp.

and baked-goods maker

Hostess Brands Inc.

—and a separate fund that invests in the stocks.

Private companies are flooding to special-purpose acquisition companies, or SPACs, to bypass the traditional IPO process and gain a public listing. WSJ explains why some critics say investing in these so-called blank-check companies isn’t worth the risk. Illustration: Zoë Soriano/WSJ

Postmerger companies are particularly attractive to short because they have larger market capitalizations, making their shares easier to borrow, and because early investors in the SPACs are eager to sell shares to lock in profits, analysts and fund managers said.

Short sellers borrow stocks they believe are overvalued and immediately sell them, hoping to repurchase the shares for a lower price when they need to be returned and to pocket the difference. The strategy proved dangerous in recent months when individual investors organized on social media to push up stocks like GameStop Corp., forcing short sellers to buy shares and cap their losses, helping to drive prices still higher.

Continued strong investor demand for SPACs could catch short sellers in a similar squeeze. Shorting SPACs can also be risky because their shares have a natural floor at $10, the price at which they can be redeemed before a merger, and because they are prone to sharp price moves, analysts said.

Still, the portion of shares sold short in SPACs and their acquisitions is climbing.

A blank-check company created by venture capitalist Chamath Palihapitiya that plans to merge with lending startup Social Finance Inc. is a popular target.



Photo:

Brendan McDermid/Reuters

Some are betting against stocks they believe rose too fast, to unsustainable valuations. The price of bioplastics company

Danimer Scientific Inc.

nearly tripled to $64 in the first six weeks of the year after it was bought by a SPAC. The short interest in Danimer stock has climbed to 8.5% from around 1% in January, and its share price has traded down to about $42, according to data from S&P.

Others are making bearish bets to hedge against potential losses in SPAC stocks they own.

Veteran short seller

Eduardo Marques

cited SPACs and their boosting the number of U.S.-listed stocks as a short-selling opportunity, according to a pitch for a stock-picking hedge fund called Pertento he plans to launch this year. America’s roster of public companies had shrunk from the mid-1990s onward, but that trend has recently reversed, partly because of SPACs.

Their popularity has helped spark new Wall Street offerings.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

this year started offering clients set baskets of similar stocks to short, pitching them as a way to hedge SPAC exposure, people who have seen the offering said. Clients typically customize the baskets Goldman offers, which are thematic and sector-focused, such as on bitcoin and electric vehicles.

Kerrisdale Capital founder

Sahm Adrangi

started shorting postmerger SPAC companies earlier than most, with a public bet in November against the stock of frozen-food maker

Tattooed Chef Inc.,

which still trades above its price at that time. But the stock has fallen about 13% during the recent market slump.

“We saw these stocks go up a lot and now that people are de-risking, these highflying SPACs are coming down to earth,” Mr. Adrangi said.

SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS

How long do you think the SPAC boom will continue, and why? Join the conversation below.

Write to Matt Wirz at matthieu.wirz@wsj.com and Juliet Chung at juliet.chung@wsj.com

Copyright ©2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Read original article here