Nikola's loss widens following a costly recall of its battery-electric semi trucks
Nikola will have to spend $62 million to replace battery packs in over 200 trucks. But it now has more cash and nearly 300 orders for its latest model.
Nikola TRE FCEV2
Courtesy: Nikola
Electric truck maker Nikola said Thursday that it has received nearly 300 orders for its new hydrogen fuel cell semitruck – but it's facing what will be a costly recall of its earlier battery-electric trucks.
Nikola recalled all of its Tre battery-electric trucks, 209 in total, in August following a fire caused by a coolant leak in a truck's battery pack. It said on Thursday that after an investigation into the causes, it has decided to replace the battery packs on all 209 trucks at an estimated cost of $61.8 million.
It expects to resume delivering battery-electric trucks to customers in the first quarter next year. Despite the recall, a dealer ordered 47 battery-electric during the third quarter, Nikola said.
Nikola said it currently has 277 "non-binding" orders for its new fuel-cell truck, from 35 different fleet customers. It shipped a total of three trucks during the third quarter, versus 63 in the year-ago quarter.
Here are the key numbers from Nikola's third-quarter earnings report.
Adjusted loss per share: 30 cents vs. 14 cents expected by Wall Street analysts polled by LSEG, formerly known as RefinitivRevenue: Negative $1.7 million vs. Wall Street's estimate of $13.3 million, according to LSEGNikola's net loss was $425.8 million, or 50 cents per share. On an adjusted basis, excluding stock-based compensation, it lost 30 cents per share. A year ago, Nikola lost $236.2 million, or 54 cents per share.
Nikola reported negative revenue of $1.7 million in the third quarter, after it paid out about $2.4 million to buy back seven trucks from former dealers as new CEO Steve Girsky refocused the company's sales efforts on California. Its revenue was $24.2 million in the third quarter of 2022.
Nikola raised $250 million during the third quarter. As of Sept. 30, it had $362.9 million in cash, up from $226.7 million as of June 30 and just $121.1 million as of March 31.