Berenberg bank indicates that British start-up is suffering from the wider sell-off of tech stocks
Arrival has signed a non-binding deal for 20,000 vans with courier firm UPS
Arrival is pioneering microfactories in UK and other markets
UK electric van start-up Arrival will run out of money next year if it doesn’t find an alternative source of credit, German bank Berenberg has said.
Arrival has been hit by the sell-off in tech stocks currently affecting the US market and has seen the value of its shares fall by 90% since it listed via SPAC (special purpose acquisition company) last May.
Arrival will have between $150m-250m (£121m-201m) of cash left by the end of this year, Berenberg said in an analyst note, citing Arrival’s own figures. “That is not enough to fund our expected 2023E [estimated] cash burn,” Berenberg analyst Michael Filatov said. “Given the current state of capital markets, we believe additional cash would likely come from a strategic partner such as UPS, Hyundai or a new entity”.
Arrival is hoping to generate its first revenue later this year when it starts production of the electric van at its Bicester facility in the third quarter.
The company has paused work on its first electric bus factory in Rock Hill, South Carolina while it concludes trials of the vehicle in the UK, the company said in a filing published with the US Securities and Exchange Commission at the end of April. Arrival initially hoped to start production at Rock Hill in spring this year.
The company said it “does not expect to generate a profit until at least 2024” in the same filing. It also admitted to “material weaknesses in its internal control over financial reporting”.
Arrival generated strong interest among stock market investors keen to ride along with the company’s ambitious plans to create a ground-up van to take on the likes of Ford. The company’s $100 million investment from Hyundai, which took a 2.57% stake in the company, and UPS, which placed a non-binding order for 10,000 vans with an option for a further 10,000, pushed the company’s stock market valuation to around $13.6 billion when it first listed. The company is now valued at $1.2 billion based on its current share price.
Arrival, started by entrepreneur and Russia’s former deputy Minister for Communications and Mass Media, Denis Sverdlov, claims its flexible and relatively cheap microfactory production concept can generate $100 million in gross profit per factory annually. Berenberg said it was modelling the completion of seven microfactories by 2025, compared to Arrival’s previous estimates it would have 31 globally by that date.
Arrival said it had 134,000 non-binding orders and expressions of intent for its vehicles as of 2 March this year. Non-binding means there’s no obligation for those who made the order to go ahead.
Arrival said in the April SEC filing it had “sufficient funds to execute its near-term business plan” including starting production in the third quarter for both the bus and van. However it “anticipates needing to raise additional capital to execute its long-term business plans”.
The start-up has said it plans to spend $75 million this year on its Bicester plant, which it characterises as its “lab” microfactory where it has prioritised starting production on time of the Arrival Van, the company’s key model. As well as the bus and two van sizes, Arrival is also developing an electric car aimed at ride-hail companies such as Uber with a launch target of 2023.
Arrival confirmed to Autocar it expected to end the year with cash reserves of between $150m-$250m. However, it said that the company’s flexible production methods in its microfactories will allow it to operate with a low balance sheet if needed. “We have the ability to ramp up and down costs quite quickly should we choose to do so,” the company said in a statement. “We have a large addressable market and there are significant industry tailwinds. We are in a good position for rapid growth with attractive margins.”
Keyword: German bank reports EV firm Arrival running low on cash