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Saturday, June 13, 2020

How Nikola Makes Money: hydrogen-electric trucks and sports vehicles. - Investopedia

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Nikola Corp. (NKLA), a young company that designs and manufacturers hydrogen-electric trucks and related components, just finished its first week as a publicly-traded company, and its stock is soaring. Nikola's shares more than doubled within days of completing a reverse merger with VectoIQ Acquisition Corp., listed as VTIQ on the Nasdaq prior to the deal. Currently, the startup's stock price is nearly 90% higher than it was on June 4, the day the combined entity's shares first began trading. As of the end of trading on June 12, Nikola had a market valuation of $23.1 billion, only $2.6 billion below the market cap of Ford Motor Co. (F).

The Reverse Merger

Nikola first announced it had agreed to a deal with VectoIQ, a publicly-traded special purpose acquisition company (SPAC), in early March. As an SPAC, VectoIQ was founded in 2016 for the purpose of carrying out a merger, asset acquisition, or other similar business combination with one or more businesses. Such companies, also known as "blank check companies", typically raise funds through an initial public offering (IPO) without having any established business plan in place. VectoIQ raised $200 million through an IPO in May 2018.

The reverse merger enabled Nikola to raise more than $700 million through a private stock placement and cash from VectoIQ's trust account, all without having to incur the costs in time and money associated with the IPO process. IPOs can take anywhere from a year or more to complete and they're expensive: underwriters may charge fees between 4% and 7% of gross proceeds and offering costs directly attributable to the IPO can run as high as $4.2 million, not to mention the legal and accounting fees. A company can often go public in as little as 30 days with a reverse merger, and often more cheaply than with a conventional IPO.

Leadership and Business Model

Nikola was founded by Trevor Milton in 2015. He named the startup after Nikola Tesla, taking the famous inventor's first name--the last name was already taken. Before founding Nikola, Milton was CEO of dHybrid Systems, which developed compressed natural gas fuel systems. Milton served as CEO until the merger with VectoIQ when he moved to the position of Executive Chairman. He was replaced as CEO by Mark Russell. Russell joined Nikola as President in 2019, and has over 20 years of experience in the manufacturing industry. Before he came to Nikola, he had most recently worked as Chief Operating Officer and President of Worthington Industries, a steel products manufacturer specializing in pressurized gas cylinders.

Unlike electric carmaker Tesla Inc. (TSLA), however, Nikola is building vehicles that implement hydrogen fuel cell technology, which have similar benefits to electric vehicles but take less time to recharge, have a longer range, and other advantages. The technology produces energy by combining hydrogen stored in a tank with oxygen from the air. Tesla's founder and CEO Elon Musk has criticized hydrogen fuel cell vehicles, calling the idea "mind-bogglingly stupid," but many senior auto executives believe that such vehicles have a better long-term future than electric cars.

Hydrogen fuel cells are not new technology, but they have previously been too costly for widespread use. Those costs have come down and are projected to fall even further in the future. In January, the Hydrogen Council forecast that the cost of hydrogen production and distribution could fall as much as 50% by 2030. The Council said that it would make "hydrogen competitive with other low-carbon alternatives and, in some cases, even conventional options."

One of Nikola's major initiatives moving forward, and one of the reasons it was looking to raise cash, is so that it could begin the roll out of its hydrogen station infrastructure. Producing hydrogen-electric trucks with zero emissions is just one aspect of the business. Those trucks will need hydrogen refueling stations, and Nikola plans to build such stations throughout North America. Nikola plans to use solar power at its fueling stations which will be supplemented with grid power. The electricity will then be used to perform "hydrogen electrolysis," basically running electricity through water to split the water into oxygen and hydrogen, the latter of which can then be used as fuel. In addition to trucks, the company plans to manufacture electric sports vehicles, such as jet skis and off-road 4x4s.

Nikola's Financials

Like many young company's, Nikola is not profitable and likely won't be for a number of years. Indeed, the company has yet to deliver a single truck, nor does it have a factory for manufacturing them. Some of the cash raised in the merger with VectoIQ is slated for funding a "state-of-the-art" manufacturing facility in Coolidge, Arizona, and Nikola said that it has more than $10 billion pre-order leases. The company doesn't expect to start generating revenue from its products until it rolls out a conventional battery-electric truck in 2021, followed by sales for its hydrogen fuel-cell-electric truck in 2023.

The little bit of revenue that Nikola has generated over the past three years, including $0.5 million in 2019, has been exclusively from small scale solar installation projects. But the company doesn't expect these activities to generate meaningful revenue in the future. With costs and expenses far in excess of those revenues, Nikola generated a net loss of $88.7 million in 2019. The company's net losses in 2018 and 2017 were $64.3 million and $17.6 million, respectively.

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How Nikola Makes Money: hydrogen-electric trucks and sports vehicles. - Investopedia
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