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Nikola ‘going concern’ filing language suggests short financial runway

Growing pains pressure results for startup

Nikola will continue to slow production of battery-electric trucks as it integrates battery pack and fuel cell stack production at its plant in Arizona. (Photo: Nikola)

Nikola Corp. said in a government filing Thursday that it may run out of money in the next 12 months and have to “modify or terminate” its business.

The startup booked $6.5 million in revenue in the fourth quarter. But the cost of those sales was more than seven times the revenue generated. Such is the life of a startup trying to launch battery-electric vehicles (BEVs) and fuel cell-electric Class 8 trucks and simultaneously start a hydrogen production, distribution and sales business.

While the numbers looked pretty ugly, Nikola still has nearly $1 billion in cash and borrowing ability to keep the business going into 2024, Chief Financial Officer Kim Brady said on a call with analysts Thursday.

However, in its Securities and Exchange Commission 10-K filing for 2022, Nikola said it may not have enough money to stay in business a year from now.

“Our ability to continue as a going concern is dependent on our ability to obtain the necessary financing to meet our obligations and repay our liabilities arising from the ordinary course of business operations when they become due,” the company said in its filing.

“The outcome of these matters cannot be predicted with any certainty at this time. If we are unable to raise sufficient capital when needed, our business, financial condition and results of operations will be materially and adversely affected, and we will need to significantly modify or terminate our operations and our planned business activities.”


Nikola executives did not mention the “going concern” language in a detail-rich conference call with analysts on Thursday.

In fact, the company laid out several projections, including that four of five trucks it sells by 2026 will be hydrogen fuel cell-powered, capable of up to 500 miles between fill-ups.

Nikola Tre battery-electric truck production to remain slow

Production of battery-electric trucks will number just 250 to 350 in 2023. That’s because infrastructure for charging them trails the ability to produce them. Nikola plans to deliver 30 to 50 Tre BEVs in Q1, generating $10.5 million to $17.5 million in revenue. Nikola dealers and the company hold most of the current Tre BEV inventory, 115 and 127 trucks, respectively. 

“We don’t believe these challenges will be abated anytime soon,” Brady said. “And all the stakeholders will need to work together to address them. This will take some time.”

Nikola plans to produce 125 to 250 hydrogen-powered Tre fuel cell electric vehicles (FCEVs) this year. Second-quarter production will slow to allow Tre FCEV integration on the BEV assembly line and the installation of fuel cell power module assembly, battery module and pack production lines.

Romeo customers left holding the bag with Nikola takeover

Customers of battery-pack maker Romeo Power, which Nikola purchased in an all-stock transaction in August, should not expect to get packs they ordered because “Romeo will no longer operate as a merchant pack supplier,” Brady said. He added that Nikola is in arbitration with some former Romeo customers.

Startups Lightning eMotors and Lion Electric are among those potentially left holding the bag. Lightning has threatened to sue over losses it incurred from not getting battery packs contracted with Romeo before its sale to Nikola. Romeo claimed in 2020 that its five-year contract with Lion was worth $234 million in revenue.

Nikola employment will shrink to about 1,500 this year from 1,583 at the end of 2022. Nikola laid off 7% of its workforce in September. It appears most of those cuts were at Romeo. Nikola is moving battery pack production from a Romeo facility in Cypress, California, to its assembly plant in Coolidge, Arizona.

“The new battery line in Coolidge includes automation, which is expected to improve the quality of modules, increase module impact throughput and enable significant cost reductions” of $33,000 per vehicle, said Michael Lohscheller, Nikola CEO and president.

The goal is to shave $100,000 off the battery pack by December, just short of the $110,000 incentive Romeo placed on each pack it sold to Nikola before the merger.  

“We have already realized $31,000 in material savings per truck,” Brady said. “We expect to achieve an additional $41,000 in material savings.”

Nikola’s high cost of sales

Nikola produced 258 Tre BEVs and delivered 131 to dealers for revenue of $50.8 million in 2022. But it cost $155.6 million to sell the trucks, resulting in a gross loss of $104.8 million.

Not counting $255.4 million in stock-based compensation, $23.2 million in legal expenses and the $14.6 million to acquire Romeo, Nikola’s net loss for the year was $450.2 million. The company produced 133 Tre BEVs in Q4. It delivered 20 trucks and 21 chargers to dealers, with an average selling price of $374,000.

“On a consolidated basis, the cost of revenue for the quarter was $52.3 million, generating a gross loss of approximately $45.8 million,” Brady said.

As a percentage of revenue, the gross loss increased because of fewer truck deliveries, higher fixed costs and freight spread over fewer deliveries, Brady said. One positive: freight costs that ate 30% of revenue in July fell to 9% in December.

Nikola slowed production to implement several enhancements to the Tre BEV, including a software update that increased usable battery capacity by up to 40 miles of increased range while enabling 350-kilowatt charging capability. That allows the truck to achieve an 80% state of charge in 90 minutes. 

Editor’s note: Updates with “going concern” language from SEC 10-K filing

CEO steers Nikola to localization of batteries and fuel cells

Nikola brands hydrogen, begins filling Anheuser-Busch fuel cell order

Incentives could shave 70% off price of Nikola fuel cell truck

Click for more FreightWaves articles by Alan Adler.

3 Comments

  1. C B Schwartz

    Anyone who knows anything about financial statement disclosures knows that the “going concern” language is CANNED language and included in virtually all start-up financial statements! This poorly written article (which recants material portions of the original laughably poorly-researched iteration) is no more than unfruitful click-bait aimed at deterring investors and those who believe in a true AMERICAN company… as evidenced by all three (Ha!) adverse comments posted.

  2. Jerry Roane

    Self-driving high speed guideway battery mule electric vehicles will disrupt this industry. Energy efficiency at 180 mph and fully loaded with 5,000 pounds payload will be 175 mpgE. Initial cost of these nimble freight vehicles will be a fraction of the cost of the larger semi.

  3. George Nolan

    I, personally, have NO doubt NKLA will survive and be a great Company for Pinal County and the Nation!!!! Hard times now but they will survive and prosper in a big way. Good product and good people putting it all together. Good Luck NKLA!!!

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Alan Adler

Alan Adler is an award-winning journalist who worked for The Associated Press and the Detroit Free Press. He also spent two decades in domestic and international media relations and executive communications with General Motors.