Canoo Inc. (GOEV) on Q1 2022 Results - Earnings Call Transcript

Operator: Greetings and welcome to the Canoo First Quarter 2022 Earnings Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. Please note, that this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to our host, Nick Cunningham, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations and Capital Markets. Thank you. You may begin. Nick Cunningham: Welcome to Canoo's quarterly earnings conference call. This is Nick Cunningham, and I'm the SVP of Investor Relations and Capital Markets at Canoo. This is my second earnings conference recently call since joining the company, and I'm thrilled to be working alongside such experience and innovative partners. Today, I have with me Investor, Chairman, and CEO, Tony Aquila, and Interim CFO and Chief Accounting Officer, Ramesh Murthy. Tony will give you an update on our business last quarter. Ramesh will then run through our financial results for the quarter. He will then turn it back to Tony, who will provide closing remarks. We'll then open the call up for questions. Please be advised we may make forward-looking statements based on current expectations. These are subject to significant risks and uncertainties and our actual results may differ materially. For a discussion of factors that could affect our future financial results and business, please refer to the disclosure in today's earnings release and on our most recent Form 10-Q and 10-K and other reports that we may file with the SEC, including Form 8-Ks. All of our statements are made as of today and are based on information currently available to us. Except as required by law, we assume no obligation to update any such statements. During this call, we'll discuss non-GAAP financial measures. You can find the reconciliation of these non-GAAP financial measures to GAAP financial measures in today's earnings release, which can be found on the IR section of our website. With that, I will turn the call over to Tony. Tony Aquila : Thanks Nick and thanks everyone for joining today for an update on our Q1 2022 activity. Last quarter, we made it clear that we are a high-tech customer-centric advanced mobility company. Again, to all our believers and supporters, thank you for riding alongside us on our journey. Today, I'm going to cover highlights from the quarter, including our solid and growing partnerships with two states and the nation, the NASA win, an update on financing, and our progress towards production. Governments around the world are helping to accelerate the migration to EVs and clean energy. We are inspired by our future forward partners in the state of Oklahoma and Arkansas as well as the Cherokee Nation, which continued to attract significant technology investments to the region. I was recently in Oklahoma where Google announced an additional investment in the state where they have invested a total of $4.4 billion in their data center in prior. The data center is the second largest in the world. This adds to the growing number of leading companies investing in the region. With the passage of the Large-Scale Economic Activity and Development or, if you will, LEAD Act, we believe the state of Oklahoma will offer an increasingly business-friendly climate. The legislation creates a nearly $700 million program to incentivize top job-creating businesses to invest in Oklahoma. The bill received overwhelming bipartisan support from the Oklahoma legislature, passing the Senate by a 41 to 5 vote and the House by an 81 to 17 vote. Thank you both the House and the Senate for their support of this monumental achievement. I'd like to give a few shout-outs. Starting with House speaker, Charles McCall, Senate President, Pro Tem Greg Treat and Governor, Stitt for their incredible leadership. Senator, Roger Thompson and the representative Kevin Wallace deserves particular credit for helping to draft and pass this important legislation. Thank you, Senator, Kevin Matthews of Tulsa and your democratic colleagues for your help in driving bipartisan support for this bill. We were active in supporting this initiative and are encouraging key partners to invest in the region. We appreciate the support from Governor, Asa Hutchinson and his collaboration with Oklahoma. He is positioning Arkansas as a leader in advanced mobility and clean energy, and we are here to assist. He established a three-state partnership with Oklahoma and Louisiana to create a regional hub for the development, production and use of clean hydrogen. I hosted a hands-on event in Bentonville, which includes several LDVs. It was attended by fleet managers from municipalities and state agencies of Oklahoma and Arkansas. In June, we are planning to attend the Up summit in Bentonville, which includes visionaries across multidimensional mobility community. We are gathering to generate ideas that we believe will challenge and change the mobility landscape. Over the coming quarter, we expect to move a 1,000-vehicle order from the state of Arkansas from Stage 2 to Stage 3. Our team will continue to work with the states for additional incentives to further solidify the region as a center for advanced mobility. This environment was selected for the combination of two visionary states and a nation, the Cherokee nation, where we stand by our commitment toward workforce development. We have already broken ground on our mega micro factory in Pryor, Oklahoma and are getting ready for the next phase of development. I would like to personally thank our government affairs team, in particular, Chris Moore for their many, many months of work in supporting initiatives within the states and the nation. Thank you to the citizens of Oklahoma and Arkansas and the Cherokee Nation for the strong support we have never felt more welcome. Great news as well, the final CFIUS dilution condition related to the shareholder, DB Global Holdings has been satisfied, and we are no longer subject to any further provisions under the national securities agreement. On the federal level, the administration continues to make strides with the national electric vehicle infrastructure formula program, which dedicated $7.5 billion in infrastructure funds over the next five years to the states for additional EV charging stations. Our five initial rollout states will receive over $665 million or $5.8 billion allocated to states to fund EV charging infrastructure with over 50% of that rolling out in the next three years. An additional $2.5 billion will be devoted to EV charging in rural areas and in underserved communities. In March, the administration authorized use of the Defense Production Act to provide funding for mining, processing and recycling of lithium, nickel, cobalt, graphite and manganese and other materials. While the benefits from this initiative may not be immediate, we believe it may increase the supply of these materials from domestic sources over the medium to long term. This potentially benefits our partners like Arkansas, which has one of the nation's largest lithium reserves. We were chosen by NASA in a competitive process to produce vehicles that will transport astronauts to the launch pad for the Artemis lunar missions. These will be the first electric NASA crude transport vehicles. The Artemis program will be the first human lunar landing in over 50 years and will be the first to bring a woman and a person of color to the moon. A quick shout out to representative Steve Walmart from the Third District of Arkansas, who recently highlighted our NASA contract on the House floor. Artemis may well prove to be one of the longest running space programs, and we are honored to partner with NASA in this historic endeavor. Over 600 million people tuned in to watch the first moon landing in 1969. And with today's media landscape and population, we anticipate billions of impressions associated with the Artemis program. These vehicles will be produced in America by the people of the Heartland, including Native Americans and veterans. We look forward to sharing more info in the future. On to financing, we have been clear with our partners and associates regarding our philosophy of raising capital judiciously. We will continue with this disciplined approach. It is a different market today, one with challenging conditions, but our strategy aligns with this type of market environment. We live in uncertain times. The team and myself have successfully navigated similar turbulent markets in the past. I reiterate we will raise appropriate amounts to satisfy what we need, bridge 2 milestones and be in a position to take advantage of our track record, our value creation and potentially improving market conditions. To start, we entered into a $250 million equity purchase agreement with financing partner Yorkville Advisors. Next, we have a commitment for a $50 million pipe from an existing shareholder, further demonstrating long-term support and belief in the company. We also filed a $300 million shelf, bringing our total accessible capital to $600 million, optimizing our financial needs to SOP. We are in ongoing discussions with parties for additional financing as it makes sense based on our disciplined approach to managing our execution plan. A related party is exploring raising up to 100 -- or excuse me, up to $1 billion of non-diluted capital for the construction of the prior facility. Oklahoma mega microfactory in Mid-America Industrial Park in the form of an ESG Clean Energy, Native American affected communities opportunity zone funding vehicle. Further to our focus on sourcing regenerative non-dilutive investment capital, this taps into eco-friendly high net worth investors focused to deploy this capital in a tax-efficient manner that makes a big ESG difference. Moving on to supply chain, dislocations, risks and achievements. We have sourced 95% of parts for our LV and LDV domestic production and are grateful to be sourcing 91% of parts from the US and allied nations. We take a different approach to traditional problems in the supply chain starting with our design, which requires 50% less parts. Today, we have arranged for an on-time delivery of 100% of the required semiconductor chips for gamma and TT builds. Building on what I said last quarter, supply chain issues have worsened, especially as things have heated up on the geopolitical arena. We are still in process of securing on-time delivery of 26% of the semiconductor chips needed for SOP, which at standard cost represent less than 2% of our BOM. This issue has our team's full attention, and we are working aggressively to resolve it. As many OEMs and others have indicated there may be industry relief for the semiconductor supply chain shortage coming in just in time, aligning to our Q4 2022, SOP. We expect to hit SOP in Q4 2022. What remains is whether we will hit our full target of 3,000 units to 6,000 units is still remaining open Since the end of Q1, we have more than doubled the gamma builds to 39 vehicles. We completed our second year of deep winter testing of more than 2,000 additional miles. We will soon be entering desert testing for the second year, validate our systems once temperatures have reached optimal conditions. There is an open invitation to any analyst out there that covers us that would like to come down to do a test drive in one of our complete gammas. You will find it an exciting and different experience. With gammas increasingly coming off the line and entering testing, we are preparing to start the scale of production at our Bentonville advanced manufacturing facility. Our second building, is going up now, and we are front-loading battery production for SOP. Battery module production increased over 156% sequentially to battery modules for 43 gamma vehicles. We have been hiring and training personnel for Bentonville, and they are currently trading on our battery line. On to sales, our Stage 2 orders have increased 17% from Q4 2021 to Q1 2022, totaling over 17,500 units to date, our preorders are completely organic. We continue to move forward sales discussion with several key partners, and we solidly anticipate that we will be sold out this year and next. We will keep you updated as we make further progress with our sales efforts. I would like to thank our partners, our suppliers, our employees for continuing to contribute to Canoo’s mission. We are here today with the spirit of embracing challenge and change rather than shying away from it. And now for our financials. Ramesh? Ramesh Murthy: Thank you, Tony. Our first quarter of 2022 results are as follows; research and development expenses of $82.5 million for the quarter, compared to $39.3 million in the prior year period. Excluding $7 million of stock-based compensation, research and development expense was $75.5 million. SG&A expense was $55.6 million for the quarter, consistent with the prior year period. Excluding $13.7 million of stock-based compensation, SG&A expense was $41.9 million. GAAP net loss was $125.4 million for the quarter, compared to a GAAP net loss of $15.2 million in the prior year period. GAAP net loss in the first quarter of 2022 included a $15.5 million non-cash gain on the fair value change of earn-out shares liability related to the periodic remeasurement of the fair value of our contingent earn-out shares liability. Adjusted EBITDA was negative $117.4 million for the quarter compared to negative $49.8 million in the prior year period. Turning to the balance sheet and cash flow. We ended the quarter with $104.9 million of cash and cash equivalents. Cash used in operations for the three months ended March 31, 2022, was $120.3 million, compared to $53.9 million for the three months ended March 31, 2021. Capital expenditures were $28.4 million for the three months ended March 31, 2022, compared to $12.1 million for the 3 months ended March 31, 2021. Due to the timing of the inflow from our announced funding, management has added a going concern qualification to our financial statements for Q1. Turning to our guidance. For the second quarter of 2022, we anticipate the following expenditures, approximately $95 million to $115 million for operating expenses, excluding stock-based compensation and depreciation and approximately $85 million to $105 million for capital expenditures. Before we open the call up for Q&A, I'll turn it over to Tony for closing remarks. Tony? Tony Aquila: Thank you, Ramesh. We will push forward to support workforce development within the Heartland, where we will build our vehicles. We are committed to technological industrial level change, which will up-fit these communities and uplift them. Our commitment, to hiring and training a workforce consisting of veterans and Native Americans is just solid. We are in a good spot to listen, to learn, to act and to provoke this change. I would like to thank, again, our partners, our suppliers and our associates for their unwavering support of our mission. As always, we will keep our eyes on the goal and stick to our philosophy of big news or no news. Thank you. Nick? Nick Cunningham: Operator, please open it up for questions. Operator: Thank you. And at this time, we will conduct our question-and-answer session. And our first question comes from Sameer Joshi with H.C. Wainwright. Please state your question. Sameer Joshi: Yes. Thanks. Good afternoon everyone. Just a quick question on the expected CapEx of $8.4-ish million, was this related to financing timing, or was it related to some other reasons? Nick Cunningham: Yeah. Thank you, Sameer, for your questions. So it was not related to financing timing. Frankly, what it is it's more -- it's a payment related to milestone recognition of our fixed assets. So once we get fixed assets, we have to follow the accounting rules for milestone recognition. So, what you see lower on CapEx in Q1, is what gets picked up into Q2. Sameer Joshi: Right. And so that's why the guidance like, $230 million to $250 million. Nick Cunningham: Sameer, as you know, we typically provide guidance only for one quarter. So we provided our guidance for Q2 2022. Tony Aquila: But I think our capital raising efforts, kind of tells you -- and if you know our track record, I mean pretty disciplined. Sameer Joshi: Got it. Yeah. I mean, that was going to be my next question, the 250 plus 50, plus additional share is about $200 million. What do you expect the timeline to be for, one, the closing of the first PIPE and on drawdown of the rest of the €250 million. Nick Cunningham: I mean, the first PIPE will probably close this week. -- No problem. And then, just after the S-3 filing, they access to the Yorkville, so that's a couple of weeks. So it's pretty -- it's virtually immediate. Sameer Joshi: Understood. One more question on the VDL Nedcar. There was some return of a prepayment of around €30.4 million. Is this now… Tony Aquila: Yeah. Sameer Joshi: …out of the way, or is there anything more to be expected? Nick Cunningham: No. But we continue to have a working relationship with them with VDL. They're actually doing some stuff with us. Tony Aquila: Yeah. Sameer Joshi: So we have a continuing relationship. So we're continuing to receive benefits from our partnership. Sameer Joshi: Understood. And congratulations on the NASA relationship. Can you give us a little bit more insight into -- from now until the vehicles are launched? Is there -- what kind of testing or prequalification or any other check boxes, milestones that you need to achieve? Tony Aquila: Yes. So, look, I think the thing that we're very focused on is the second building in Bentonville. The first building is up. It's getting ready for some of its installation work. The second building is moving at record speed. The team there is doing an incredible job. That's a pretty big focus for us, obviously, because Bentonville can produce 20,000-ish vehicles for us. I think also in addition to that, you saw the commentary about exploring more non-dilutive capital in the essence that the MAIP where we're building, this is an opportunity zone, that could give us access to some very interesting capital. And a lot of people talk about ESG like it's a thing; for us, it's just our culture. And it’s why we're doing what we're doing. So it aligns well. So we’d be very focused on that in the quarter. In addition to that, the microchip's gap for SOP, we've secured gamma and TT, but that 2% of the BOM cost for ships of almost all vehicles out there, it does make you more reliant on the chips you have, right, from a yin-and-yang. Sameer Joshi: Yes, I know. You actually answered the next question I was going to ask. But for NASA itself, is there any -- another -- any additional hurdles or milestones that you need to achieve or -- a path before the vehicle can actually be launched to the moon? Tony Aquila: Yes. So this is -- the content of that would be confidential and really a NASA discussion. Any discussions we make on that would most likely be joint and/or authorized, but it's a very exciting program. In fact, I will be spending most of the week there, with some of our team members. I'm really proud of what the country is doing, and it's just an amazing privilege to be a part of it. Sameer Joshi: Yeah. Yeah. No, certainly. Congrats on all the progress you made thus far and good luck. Thank you. Tony Aquila: Thank you, Sameer. Thank you. Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Jaime Perez with R.F. Lafferty. Please go ahead. Jaime Perez: Good day, everybody, and thanks for taking my questions. Could you give us an update on the equipment in the plant to I think last quarter, you gave us an update on how much is in the plant? And so could you just give us some color on that? Tony Aquila: We're producing vehicles now. We're running somewhere between, call it, up to 12 units a week right now. So we have – that's giving us a chance to work with our current robotics and everything and work out our processes. When you have half the number of parts, and you have a unique design that's designed to be repairable, it actually is proving to be much better. We have areas that we've been able to accelerate, so that we can improve our processes. So those items are going in there. We're testing them. We're fine-tuning them. We're getting them ready for SOP in Bentonville. And I don't know, if you guys can travel yet, but love to have you come down and drive them, driving this vehicle by wire is an experience. So I'd love to have you come down. Jaime Perez: Well, I'm not that far way, so I think – I can take upon your offer. Now the gamma vehicles, are they testing? Are they in customers' hands or are the customers – if the customers are the individuals or fleet. Could you just give us some update on that? Tony Aquila: Yes. So right now, we are using them for customer engagement, and we're primarily concentrating on fleet customers right now. Jaime Perez: All right. All right. And as far as the preorderis the bulk of that fleet customers or individual reserve – Tony Aquila: They're purely organic. We haven't laid in there anything but the 1,000 of the 2,000 fleet orders. And I believe maybe some – probably one-third of it is coming from various fleets in the order, maybe a little more than that. I'd have to get the specific breakdown, but we can get that to you, if you want it. But the focus for us right now is obviously on larger users because we want to book ourselves out into prior's opening. Jaime Perez: Right. Now any feedback from these large clients as far as the performance of the vehicles or the median requirements because we have other EVs. You know, I’ve been in touch with -- the potential clients are fleet clients and they sort of demanded some load requirements, I mean, how is that going along with their condition? Tony Aquila: Certainly, is going really well. I mean we should have played -- I was driving them around in L.A., I guess, a week ago. And I mean, people are just stopping us on the street asking questions, pulling up to us on stop signs, just because of the amount of space, the utilization, the turning rate and capabilities are -- is the best I've felt about it all coming together. But the best thing is I tell everyone, when you drive it and you sit in it and you see it and you park it next to something that you're used to, it just tells you what we did. So that's going to be the best way for you to write your note is to actually come down and drive. Tony Aquila: Yes, I can't wait, especially the unique design. Now as far as the -- congratulations on the audeamus win. I know it just might be a little bit hypothetical, but what other opportunities are you looking at in this because it's a pretty -- you mentioned it's a pretty visible thing to go to watch account down and watch Canoo vehicle take the astronauts to the rocket. So I mean what other opportunities do you think this might open as far as maybe government or other programs? A – Ramesh Murthy: Well, I mean, I think -- Jamie, we told you about our focus was to focus on the market movers and really focus on purpose-built activities. And that have a high return for our customers and for ourselves. And obviously, this is not just the only thing we're focused on, right? So although it's an important one, but it does open us to engage with other government agencies, which we already are. Jaime Perez: All right. So thanks for the update. That’s all the questions, I have. Have great day. Tony Aquila: Thanks, Jamie. Operator: Thank you. There are no further questions at this time. I'll turn the floor back to management for closing remarks. Nick Cunningham: Thank you all for joining our call, and have a great day. Operator: Thank you. All parties may now disconnect. Have a good day.
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