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Friday, July 31, 2020

Electronic Arts (EA) Q1 2021 Earnings Call Transcript - Motley Fool

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Electronic Arts (NASDAQ:EA)
Q1 2021 Earnings Call
Jul 30, 2020, 5:00 p.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

undefined[Audio in process]

Andrew Wilson -- Chief Executive Officer

In addition to the ongoing challenges of pandemic, these last few months have brought forward important cultural conversations around racial and social justice, harassment and conduct. We've long held a quality inclusion and diversity at the center of our beliefs at Electronic Arts. And as a company, we've made our positions clear and demonstrated with our actions that we have a long-term commitment to making a positive impact in our world. As we've shared previously, our business focus continues to be on our key growth drivers, delivering amazing games and content, offering live services that extend and enhance the experience and connecting more players across more platforms and ways to play.

In our first quarter of FY '21, engagement was exceptionally strong across our portfolio. We launched new games, delivering incredible growth in live services and welcomed tens millions of new players into the EA network since the beginning of April. the biggest first quarter in EA history with net bookings and operating cash flow, both setting new records. As a result, we are raising our full year FY '21 net revenue and net bookings guidance today.

We've seen tremendous growth over the last four months in our business and across the industry. At EA, we sit at the intersection of two fundamental secular trends that have become increasingly clear. First, social interactions in our world are moving from physical to digital. And second, the consumption of sports and entertainment is moving from linear to interactive.

We've seen both of these trends accelerate during the COVID-19 period. Tens of millions of new players have come into our games, and we also have many players returning to our franchises after some time away. In addition to higher engagement from our existing players, these new and returning players are now deeply engaged in our live services, establishing new play patents and building new friendships through our games. So while there are noble aspects to this period of time we are in, and it may be difficult to predict the patterns of new and returning players, we expect these trends to continue during and after the pandemic.

We remain committed to continuing to innovate in this space, keeping EA at the forefront, providing social interaction and interactive entertainment to a wide global audience. I'll share a few highlights here that capture what our teams delivered for players in Q1. We launched two new games to players during the quarter, Command & Conquer Remastered, which was incredibly well-received by fans and critics and became a top-selling title on and as well as Burnout Paradise Remastered on the Nintendo Switch. Our teams also delivered over 30 new content updates for our console and PC titles, including two major game expansions as well as more than 50 updates to our mobile games.

All of this and the continued development of our upcoming titles for FY '21 and beyond was completed with our teams working from home. Apex Legends continues its momentum as an exceptional live service, building on strong performance for the last several quarters and bringing even more players together in the game. Q1 saw the most game sessions played and highest revenue total since the launch for Apex. And engagement in Season 5 was the highest level since our first new season of content.

Creative events continue to be a huge draw for our Apex community, and the most recent event Lost Treasures had over 96 million hours played in the first two weeks. We're bringing pex to players on the Switch and Steam, and we're excited to introduce cross play later this year, so more players get engaged and play together with their friends. The world has an appetite for sports and for the experiences that EA SPORTS delivers in our games. With real-world sports disrupted, EA SPORTS has become the center of the emotional connection of sports.

And we brought millions of new returning and existing players into their own personal sports stories through our games. Acquisition of new and returning players in FIFA grew more than 100% year over year in Q1 with more than seven million joining during the quarter. These are now among our most engaged groups of players, demonstrating commitment and longevity in our FIFA live service. FIFA in Asia grew significantly year over year in Q1 as well, with FIFA Online 4 now engaging nearly 30 million players to date.

Madden NFL 20 also had an incredible Q1, building on what is already the biggest year ever for our Madden franchise. Player acquisition in Madden NFL grew nearly 140% year over year in Q1 and virtually every measure of Madden Ultimate team engagement is up more than double over last year. The Sims continues to resonate with more players around the world. The Sims 4 now has more than 30 million players life to date across all platforms and daily, weekly and molly active player totals in the game all reached record highs for our first quarter.

Sims Mobile games had an excellent Q1 as well. The creative and inclusive nature of the Sims experience on any device is truly unique in all of gaming. And we're especially proud of the way it helps players community and express themselves during culturally challenging times. During Q1, we also launched 30 titles on the Steam platform, bringing our games to Steam enables us to substantially grow our PC audience.

Our Origin business grew 75% year over year as well by opening up the ability for Steam and Origin plays to play together, we're now positioned to harness the full power of the PC community. Bringing Steam is also foundational to our EA subscription service that will go live on the platform later this month. In addition, the total number of players in our subscriptions on Origin, Xbox 1 and PS4 grew quarter over quarter with new players coming into our services to experience more great games. It was an unprecedented quarter of growth.

Looking forward, we've also seen strong engagement in Q2. Although, it is difficult to predict ongoing levels of growth in this environment, we have grown our player base during this period and added value to our network. Our EA SPORTS live services are acting as social networks for sports fans around the world, and the strength of those connections will grow as real sports seasons return. Players communities for the Sims, Apex, Star Wars and more are building relationships through our games, and we expect them to be with us for a long time to come.

Building on this strength, we have exciting new tiles and content coming in Q2 and beyond, including Rocket Arena, which just launched with final strike games. We showcased many of these new experiences in our EA Play live broadcast in June, where our audience grew significantly year over year and the trailers and videos that we debuted have been watched more than 31 million times. We will begin launching our new EA SPORTS games starting in August. Nowhere else in the world can sports fans find the breadth and depth of interactive experiences like the ones in our EA SPORTS portfolio this year.

With UFC 4 launching on August 14, we've got something for every fight fan, an amazing roster of fighters, tremendous customization, brand-new environments and more fluid gameplay, all making this the most authentic MMA game we've ever created. Madden NFL 21 is then set to launch on August 28. On top of major gameplay innovation, a new campaign mode and more of the superstar X factor abilities that fans love, we're bringing creative and innovative new ways to play Madden that build on the strength of our NFL partnership. We have more people than ever before playing and connecting through FIFA.

And when FIFA 21 launches on October 9, the world's leading football experience will expand with more ways to play with friends. VOLTA and will bring new social dimensions to the game, and we're also delivering the most comprehensive update to career mode that we've ever released. NHL 21 launches October 16, and we're excited about the great work from our NHL team this year, and we'll hear more about that soon. Then in the season, EA SPORTS will also lead the way on the new PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X.

Next generation of FIFA 21 and Madden 21 will bring the next level of innovation and interactive sports experiences to fans with the launch of the new consoles. This will be a great year of new games and comment for sports fans around the world. With our cloud-based broadcasting platform e-sports operating at global scale, we delivered 85% more e-sports broadcast content in the last four months that we give in all of calendar 2019. Demand for our FIFA Apex Legions and Madden e-sports content across major network is unprecedented.

And the great entertainment we are providing is bringing more players and viewers into new experiences with our games. We're now significantly expanding and diversifying our content for the rest of this year. Our plan to deliver three times as many broadcast events in FY '21 over last year spanning linear and digital breakouts with more athlete celebrity and fan competitions in addition to global e-sports ecosystems Apex Legends, FIFA and Madden. We also just launched a Sims on TBS and Buzzfeed, our first ever reality competition TV show.

Seamlessly integrating entertaining player stories and gameplay alongside weakly challenges for the Sims 4 players, it's an entirely new and unique way to create competition. It shows the innovation we can bring to the e-sports space with our franchises, and we're excited by the fan reaction to date. We're also very pleased with the response to our new Star Wars: Squadrons game from studios set the launch on October 2. This is going to be the game for anyone that's ever had the fantasy of piloting a Star Wars fighter with a deep level of immersion built by our teams in collaboration with Disney and we are decided to add another all new experience to the portfolio of amazing Star Wars titles we've delivered to fans, especially one that opens up new dimensions like full VR support and cross play.

Our business is strong, and it's been an amazing start to the year. These are challenging times in pandemic, and we're deeply appreciative of all that our teams are doing to continually innovate and deliver for our players and push the boundaries of being entertainment at every step of the way, even while working from home. We also have to thank all of our players for their support. We're humbled to see so many using our games and our network as a way to connect with their friends and families during this time.

There is much more to come from Electronic Arts in FY '21. Now I'll hand the call over to Blake.

Blake Jorgensen -- Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks Andrew. We saw extraordinary levels of player engagement through the first quarter, far higher than we even ever expected or had forecast in May. And it proved more resilient than we had expected. Engagement was broad-based, with net bookings for live services at extraordinary levels for FIFA, Madden, Apex Legends, the Sims and our mobile titles.

And with increased sales of our games across the breadth of our entire catalog, we connected with more people to the games they want and to each other. All of this was reflected in our results with record Q1 highs in net revenue, net bookings, live services and cash flow. I'll report the specifics of our results on a GAAP basis, then use our operational measure of net bookings to discuss the dynamics of our business. Before I get to the numbers, let me remind everyone of the three reporting changes we implemented this quarter and discussed in our last quarter call.

First, we now represent GAAP net revenues in the income statement as one item rather than as product and service. Second, we report mobile bookings gross of platform fees instead of net. And finally, we updated the presentation of our net books by composition to focus on full game and live service sales. Our historical results have been recast for comparability.

EA's net revenue was $1.46 billion compared to $1.21 billion a year ago and above our guidance by $239 million. Operating expenses were $700 million compared to $607 million a year ago. This was above our expectations, driven by variable compensation due to our strong performance in the quarter, as well as COVID related costs and lower attrition. Operating income was $471 million compared to $415 million a year ago and above our expectations.

Diluted earnings per share was $1.25 as well above our expectations of $0.93, driven by the top line beat. Operating cash flow for the quarter was $378 million, up $220 million from last year. Capital expenditures in the quarter were $38 million, resulting in a free cash flow of $340 million. Operating cash flow for the last 12 months was $2.02 billion, a new record.

See our earnings slides for further cash flow information. Our cash and short-term investments at the end of the quarter were $5.96 billion, up 15% year on year. Now I'd like to turn to the key drivers of our business this quarter. Net bookings for the quarter were $1.39 billion, up $608 million from the prior year and $390 million above our guidance, driven by strength across the board with strong performance from our core franchises and live services.

Currency headwind net of hedges was $42 million year on year. Live service and other net bookings were $1.103 billion, up $416 million from the prior year. This extraordinary result is a consequence of the years of work we've invested in building teams, processes and content for our titles, which delivered strength across our portfolio. FIFA, Madden, Apex Legends and the Sims all grew very strongly.

Ultimate team was up 70% on a like-for-like basis, adjusting for the timing of Ultimate team events for the extra week in the quarter and for currency. With Lost Treasures, Apex Legends presented its most engaging event ever and delivered its biggest season since launch. And as Andrew mentioned, The Sims 4 exceeded 30 million users life to date, and Q1 net bookings was more than double year on year. Mobile was up 32%, with success across our portfolio, led by Star Wars Galaxy of Hero, which had the best quarter since 2018.

The game has now generated over $1 billion in lifetime bookings. FIFA Mobile, SimCity, Sims FreePlay showed growth of a similar magnitude. Full game bookings were $287 million, up $192 million from the prior year. 52% of our unit sales are now digital rather than physical, measured on Xbox 1 and PlayStation 4 over the last 12 months.

Net bookings for the packaged goods and for the full game digital downloads are this was primarily driven by our deep catalog. A brief note on financial reporting before we go into guidance. People are playing our games for longer as a result of the amazing content provided on our live service games and the social connections they make within our games. So for GAAP reporting, we're increasing the period of time over which we recognize the portion of net revenue.

This begins in our second quarter only affects GAAP revenue and only affects the timing of recognition, not total net revenue. We estimate that it will move the recognition of approximately $300 million in GAAP net revenue from fiscal 2021 into fiscal 2022. It does not affect net bookings or operating cash flow. Now turning to guidance.

Due to the significant out performance during the quarter, we're increasing both our net revenue and net booking guidance for the full year. In doing so, we had to balance the significant boost we saw in Q1 and the confidence we have in our games and live services against the unknowable macroeconomic environment for the rest of the fiscal year. We're taking a cautious view that assumes that we will continue to see a modest tailwind to engagement driven in part by continued shelter in place orders. This is offset by a weaker economy or could be weaker economies around the world and the slightly sports launches.

optimism. For example, we've added tens of millions of players to the EA player network since the beginning of April. As Andrew mentioned, FIFA alone attracted seven million new players on console in the last quarter, and more people are at this time than any previous cycle. This is significant in that people have played the game recently are more likely to buy the new one.

New players are building networks of friends in our games as they play. Engagement in FIFA and Madden continue to be massively above where we would normally expect it to be. Nevertheless, we haven't launched a major tile since the pandemic struck, so it's too early to draw general conclusions. Our business is strong.

Our games are on track. Hopefully, our base case around the uncertain economic will prove to be too cautious. Thus, our expectations for full-year GAAP revenue are now $5.625 billion, cost of revenue to be $1.483 billion and earnings per share of $2.97. We're raising our operating cash flow guidance by $275 million to $1.85 billion.

We continue to anticipate capital expenditures of around $125 million, which would deliver free cash flow of $1.725 billion. A note on opex before moving into the business drivers. The increase in our prior guidance is mainly driven by variable compensation plus higher-than-expected headcount due to lower turnover during this difficult period. We're continuing to invest in our growth drivers, and in particular, we're increasing the number of mobile tiles we have in development.

We now expect net bookings for the year to be $5.95 billion, $400 million above our prior guidance. Versus last year, this factors in an FX headwind of about $100 million. And as you build your models, note that we are also forecasting a fall in interest rates of about $80 million compared to last year as we mentioned in our last quarterly earnings call. For the second quarter, we now expect GAAP net revenue of $1.125 billion, cost of revenue to be $280 million and operating expenses of $755 million.

This results in earnings per share of $0.21 in the second quarter. We anticipate net bookings for the second quarter to be $875 million. The significant year-on-year variance is driven by the move of FIFA 21 from Q2 to Q3 and by the later launch of Madden NFL in Q2, which we have previously announced. The change in mix for Q2 weighs on gross margin for the quarter.

Madden stays in Q2, but has less live service opportunity than in prior years by virtue of starting and FIFO moves at the beginning of Q3. With regard to live services, remember, we are focused on engagement ahead of product launches, so expect lower bookings at that point of the cycle, see the phasing that we provided in our quarterly presentations on our IR website. You'll see that the smaller Q2 is more than offset by a much larger Q3 and a slightly larger Q4. As we approach six months working from home, we're finding ways to continue to deliver great games and services.

We're excited to showcase the incredible efforts or Madden, FIFA, AHL and have done through as they lead into the upcoming launches and by the work of all of our live serve teams. The shelter in place orders have so far been a strong tailwind for our business as players look for safe, and social entertainment in these difficult times. A macroeconomic headwind in the second half seems very likely nevertheless, our ability to deliver high quality, AAA and titles for our players, combined with the incredible success of our ongoing live services and increased reach across platforms and geographies enable us to continue to deliver for players and investors. Now I'll turn the call back to Andrew.

Andrew Wilson -- Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Blake. These past few months have been unlike anything we've ever experienced. It was an extraordinary quarter for games and for Electronic Arts. Our business is strong.

We've just had the largest first quarter in the history of the company with tremendous engagement from existing, new and returning players. We are well positioned to build on that strength. We will continue to deliver more amazing games and content, including new EA SPORTS titles, more groundbreaking fund, e-sports content, Star Wars launching in October and more. We'll continue to extend and enhance the experiences in our live services on all platforms from console to PC to mobile.

And our focus on making more players across more platforms will continue as we bring our subscription to Steam, integrate our games with expand support for cross play and reach more platforms with our games, including the next-gen consoles coming later this year. It's also increasingly apparent that COVID-19 could be with us for some time. Keeping all of our teams safe is our first priority. They are the true strength of electronic arts and their commitment and courage during the challenges of recent months has been deeply inspiring.

Not only have they continued to develop and launch games from home, our employees have supported nearly 1,000 different charities in the last three months, including tens of thousands of hours of volunteer time. The contributions to COVID relief efforts and racial justice organizations along with matching funds and additional contributions from EA have totaled more than $3 million to date. In this environment, supporting our teams, building our culture and striving to amplify the positive impacts of play in our communities around the world has never been more important. We look forward to sharing more updates with you in the quarters ahead.

Be well and stay healthy. Now Blake and I are here for your questions.

Questions & Answers:

Operator

[Operator instructions] Your first question comes from the line of Mario Lu with Barclays.

Mario Lu -- Barclays -- Analyst

Great. Thanks for taking the question. I have one on FIFA, I didn't want so the first one on FIFA, with the leasing now in fiscal 3Q. Although it was previously announced, this shift does drive fiscal 2Q guidance to come in below the street.

So can you help quantify how much of the shift this caused in terms of bookings? Any other dynamics to keep in mind going forward? And should we expect FIFA 22 to now be back in a normal fiscal two release quarter?

Blake Jorgensen -- Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer

Yes. It's a good question, and I appreciate you asking. The entire delta is FIFA. Nothing else is going on.

We've tried to be pretty clear about that. I don't think people have necessarily heard that, but that's the entire delta. We've also not changed the back half of the year guidance down. So you should assume we are planning -- we will make up anything we might have missed during the quarter or the two quarters.

The other thing I would just want to remind people is that it's all -- Ultimate team is all event-driven. That means that there may be some events that roll into next year, which actually strengthen next year as well as this year. We made a simple decision, which is we wanted to give both the FIFA and Madden team a couple of extra weeks to final and what has been the most difficult situation we've ever lived through, which is building games from home. We are incredibly impressed with what they've been able to do, how they've been able to innovate the game within this context.

And so our view is -- our hope is that most investors are focused on each quarter. They're focused on the full year. We just raised guidance by $400 million. And I remind people in the history of both Andrew and I running the company, we have only raised guidance in the first quarter once.

So you guys all know our conservative approach and how we're always cautious. We also mentioned today that we know there is there's not economic risk the back half of the year, I'd like to know that, but we all know there's economic risk. And so I think I would take our raising of guidance and not lowering guidance in the back half of the year even after moving FIFA and Madden is a pretty positive signal. And I think Andrew and I both mentioned in the call, the other thing, which was we are continuing to see engagement and monetization levels higher than we've normally seen during the -- where we currently are in the second quarter.

And I'm not telling you that, that's going to change the second quarter or we would have changed guidance because we just don't know yet. But remember, the unbelievably high monetization we saw in Q1 does not drop off a cliff. It will slowly decline as we all go back to a normal life. But if you ask many of us, that might be six months, nine months or two years.

And what we also mentioned, which I think is the most important component is as people, rejoin or join as a new member of a social network around the game, they tend not to lead. And so this should ultimately long-term benefit our business. And it's just -- the problem for us is we've never lived through this before, and none of us have -- you guys haven't either. And so we don't have a road map to be able to help us be able to predict exactly what it's going to look like.

And so we're trying to be transparent. We're trying to be straightforward. And we're trying to be optimistic because we are optimistic, but we're also trying to be realistic that we know that there's economic strains out there around the world that could ultimately come back to impact our business or anybody's business. So sorry to go on about the question, but I think we want to try to make sure we're -- people are understanding that it's FIFA and Madden and FIFA Ultimate team that are moving.

But other than that, we're not signaling anything else other than we made a decision. And we made it some time ago because we enhanced it some time ago. So we wanted to give the teams a few extra weeks to make sure that the product was exceptional when it came out the door, and we're confident that that's where it's going to be. Now your second question, sorry, I went on too long in the first question.

So I forgot your second question.

Mario Lu -- Barclays -- Analyst

That's great. I have a second one. That's very helpful, Blake. So the second one is on Star Wars.

Can you provide some color behind the decision process regarding pricing squadrons at $40 with no additional MTX. So I do think all the gains are not equal. So overall, I'm surprised how the standard has been for $60 games in the last 15 years. So why go $40 all in and not free to play, or just in general, what are your thoughts on potentially pricing next-gen title at a higher price point of $70 instead of $60?

Blake Jorgensen -- Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer

Yes. And I guess I'll have Andrew sort of help out on this as well because it's important to hear for both of us. I mean we always look at the games, and we want to make sure we are providing the greatest value for our players. And games all have different scale.

And most of our games right now have huge scale. We designed this game to really focus on what we heard from consumers, which is one of their greatest and that's to be able to fly fighter, fighter will be in a dog fight. And so it doesn't have the breadth of some of our games, but it is still an incredible game. And so that's why we chose to price it at a slightly lower level to also allow access to as many people as possible who had that Star Wars fantasy.

I'll let Andrew jump in and talk about how we view pricing long term. But I think you've seen us over the years differentiate pricing on games. We've differentiated pricing on things like plants versus zombies games because we knew that they were skewed to younger audiences, for example, or maybe didn't have the depth of all of the game modes that you might see in an Ultimate or FIFA or Madden. Andrew, do you want to add to that?

Andrew Wilson -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. I would start with what are the player motivations we're trying to fulfill and what are the expectations of those player groups in fulfillment of those motivations. And I think that we start there long before we ever get to price point. And as you've seen from us, we have games across the spectrum of pricing, whether that's free to play or at $60 or at $60 with an additional live service for as part of our subscription offerings.

And at the end of the day, as we think about it, we start with a player, we start with the motivations and expectations that they have, and we build out the game. In this case, this is a very deep and immersive game and that $40 felt like the right price point, given the breadth of the game. Very proud of what doing. We wanted it to be a wholly experience that was deeply emerging in that fantasy.

As we think about pricing more broadly, I would come back to that position, which is we start with what are the player motivations we're trying to fulfill, what are the expectations that players have around depth and breadth and live service in any given experience, and we build from there. As we think about this year, you've seen what we've done as we've announced that we will offer the ability for players to transition free of charge from existing generation of console titles to the next generation of console titles for FIFA and Madden. We did that, and we set out to build the best Playstation 4, Xbox One experience as we could as well as the most innovative and creative experiences for Xbox Series X and PlayStation 5. And what we wanted for our players this year because what they asked for was the smoothest possible transition that meant that they could jump into the game when it launched on existing platforms and then move into the next platform as it made sense for them later on in the year.

And that has been our focus this year. And we will continue to kind of look at this over time.

Chris Evenden -- Vice President, Global Marketing Communications

Next question?

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Todd Juenger with Sanford Bernstein.

Todd Juenger -- Sanford C. Bernstein -- Analyst

Thank you so much and glad to hear everybody is relatively well. Can I ask, if you don't mind, just thinking through the changes in real estates and the sports titles. I know that was probably a production driven decision. But when we're looking at the real live physical sports leagues around the world, especially in the states, obviously there's a lot of uncertainty about the timing and shape of their seasons this year and next.

And just wondering how that maps to the release of your games and the events and the live services and how matters. For instance, if there was no NFL season in the fall or if it had to be stopped in the halfway through, how does that matter to your games, how should we think about that? I know it's sort of a broad hypothetical, but there's so much uncertainty there. So I guess the underlying question is how much does whatever happens as live sports affect how we should think about and expect people to engage with and spend money in your games? And I have a follow up. Thanks.

Blake Jorgensen -- Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer

Go ahead, Andrew.

Andrew Wilson -- Chief Executive Officer

Sorry, I would start with kind of two things. One is, my sense is that we will have sports of some shape or form in the real world over time. Second thing is regardless of whether we do or we don't, sports fans have an insatiable appetite for sports day in, day out, week in, week out, month in, month out. And what you heard us talk about in the prepared remarks and what you have seen in Q1 is we've been able to fulfill that insatiable appetite for sports with our games.

And there's really -- when we think about our sports games, we think about it on two vectors. One is the connection, the emotional connection of the real world sports and all that's happening with the players and teams and the leagues that you love. The other is we provide you a tool set that features those players, teams and the leagues that you love, but allows you to tell your own personal sports stories. And what you saw from us this past quarter is we really leaned into that.

And we actually augmented that some. So while we provided opportunities and events so that you might tell your own personal sports stories with your friends and your rivals, we also talked in about additional e-sports content, celebrity content and e-sports and celebrity competitions. And what we've seen is that we've been able to uphold and fulfill the motivations of sports fans and the needs of sports fans and allow them to remain connected to the sports they love. And I would tell you, I think that we are comfortable doing that for as long as it needs to.

And then to the extent that sports come back online, we believe that's a further accelerator to our business.

Blake Jorgensen -- Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer

Yes. And what I said in the remarks was Ultimate team in the quarter was up 70%. I don't think we've ever seen a growth like that. And as part of that, we know, for example, Madden Ultimate team was up over 300%.

And there was no live sports going on at any point in time during that quarter. And I think Andrew made the point, and I would just stress this is when people are sports fans, remember they are sports fans connected to a social network. No one plays a fantasy sports game alone. No one plays Ultimate team alone.

They play with each other. And that means that it builds off of the social network more than anything else. And so in the absence of sports, people double down and are excited. And so while we always want live sports to go on because it helps feed the engagement and excitement around the business.

We also know sports fans are not going to stop being sports fans if the underlying sports stops. And I think the first quarter proves that better than anything we've ever seen. And so we hope sports is back because we all love sports, and we want to engage in it. I'd prefer not to watch sports with an empty stadium.

But at the end of the day, it's better than no sports at all. And our games allow people that continued engagement with something that they really love. And I would tell you, that extends well beyond sports, right? I mean, you might ask, well, if there's no Star Wars content in the next six months because movie studios are shut down or TV studios are shut down, does that hurt your business? No, it goes just the opposite, which is, if you're a Star Wars fan, you want to find every single opportunity to engage in Star Wars. And that's why we saw growth of Star Wars in order, growth of our Star Wars online business and continued growth of the catalog of Battlefield 1 or Battlefront I and Battlefront II during the quarter.

When you're Star Wars fan, you want Star Wars, and you got to get it somewhere. So that's why we keep coming back. This is an incredible opportunity for us. But at the same time, we also understand that we can't predict the future.

And so we're always careful of trying to predict the future, but we do see a huge opportunity.

Todd Juenger -- Sanford C. Bernstein -- Analyst

Thank you both for that. If you don't mind, just one follow up. Somebody's got to ask the M&A question that you get every quarter. So maybe I'll go this quarter and just it seems more right than ever, given your cash balance and the cash generation and the value of your currency, there's at least one big asset we know of that is believed to be in the market.

Just wondering your disposition toward the thought and the appeal of acquisition, how you are thinking through that given where the industry sits right now and anything, you'd share on that?

Blake Jorgensen -- Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks. Yes. You know what I would say there is. It is very rare that we don't get a chance to look at anything that's for sale.

I mean, you can imagine, people call us and say, we're thinking about selling this business or we're thinking about selling ourselves we are a place that a lot of people want to come as a long-term home if they decide to sell the business. So, we get to look at almost everything. I can't comment on any specific acquisition other than what I will tell you is as you've seen in the past, where we've done the best is where we have long-term relationships with people, and we're really trying to buy great talent versus games. And I think Respawn is a classic example of that.

We were able to bring them into the fold, give them incredible support, and it was all driven by the fact that they had incredible talent. It wasn't about and we'll maybe see it fall at some point, sometime down the road, but it was really about the team. And it starts at the top with, but it goes all the way through the whole organization. So, we're always looking at that.

We'll always continue to look at that. We would hope we can find more. Our hope was that some of the challenges in our broad world economy would actually make people think and understand that being sub scale is difficult. But at the same time, as you've seen from our results, I think everybody is going to do well in the next couple of quarters in our industry.

And so, it might take some time, but trust that we are more interested than ever because we see talent and building great new franchises as critical to the long-term growth of the business.

Todd Juenger -- Sanford C. Bernstein -- Analyst

Fair enough. Thank you both. Appreciate the questions. 

Blake Jorgensen -- Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer

Good. Thanks. 

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Ryan Gee with Bank of America.

Ryan Gee -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Hey good afternoon. So, I believe I heard you guys said, Ultimate team was up 70% year over year. I believe that's revenue. Can you remind us what that growth rate looked like going into shelter in place? And here we are, end of July, how it looks kind of quarter to date? And then I have a follow up.

Blake Jorgensen -- Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer

Yes. I mean, I don't know off the top of my head, remember, but I think we were bouncing between high single digits and low double digits, maybe mid-double digits, like between 15% and 20%. I mean, we were having a strong Ultimate Team quarter. If you go to the fourth quarter, if you go back and look at the transcript, you could probably see it, I just don't have it in front of me.

But I mean, this is off the charts different, right? I mean it is exceptional. And particularly for games like Madden, where normally, the soft spot in a game like that, where we really come out of the Super Bowl, and there's only a few places where you can kind of continue to drive engagement around things like the draft and the combiners. And you would expect this year, maybe because many of those things were not done in person that might have hurt ultimately. But remember, the team a couple of years ago, started working on changing and adding new modes to the game and improving, and it really came to play in the past year.

So, we were seeing super strength in Madden base game, ad Madden Ultimate team coming into the quarter, and it just continued to get stronger and strongest. I think the other thing is that all the Ultimate team teams stepped up to think about what new events could they run a world of stay at home, work from home or whatever it might be. And so they doubled down on social and really drove opportunities in a world in which there was sports. But as I said in the last question, sports fans were looking for their sports excitement and essentially to be able to play.

And so you saw that in our e-sports calendar. As Andrew mentioned, we completely doubled down e-sports even though we had to do it all from a virtual broadcasting facility versus our own broadcasting facility. And our team did an amazing job of creating some incredible content. And I'll just give you a personal when I see my wife watching a Madden e-sports tournament and cheering on TV, I know -- because she's a massive sports fan.

I know we get the right tone with consumers. We're delivering for consumers what they want. So what we've seen so far, as I mentioned on the call earlier, we saw this peak of massive engagement in the April, May time frame, and that slowly declined as some people have gone back to work or their offices. But it is still well above what we've normally seen, particularly at this time of the year, which is the slowest time as we move from one sport season to the next.

And I can't tell you how that's going to look for the rest of the quarter or for the rest of the year. But remember, we know we've got a lot of new people in this game. A lot of people are engaging in Ultimate team and the sports franchises. And we don't think that shuts off overnight and maybe never shuts off.

And we hope that will give us longer-term growth. But that will ultimately be a question when we start talking about next year's guidance and all those things that we normally do. But don't take our conservatism in any way on guidance going forward as saying anything about the gains and on engagement, it's all about the economy at the end of the day. And you guys tell me, you saw the GDP numbers this morning.

Are you confident the economy is going to be strong in the next six, 12 months? I just don't know. That's the thing that weighs on us the most. And yet at the same time, we know that the engagement in our games has never been higher. To see the Sims up 110% year over year, I mean, that's driven by a lot of new people, players coming into the Sims.

And we know with the Sims, remember, it's grown every year for the last six years. That means that people who come in don't churn out. They get engaged and then they continue to engage in all content that's been produced and the new content. And that's where we get pretty excited.

So sorry, a bigger answer to your question than you probably wanted, but I want to make sure everyone understands. We are prudent. We are conservative, as you guys all know, and yet at the same time, we are unbelievably optimistic about the business, even though we got here would be a really difficult time around the world.

Ryan Gee -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

No, that's safe to me from asking several questions and then getting hard time for asking too many. So maybe I'll just finish with one question on FIFA. So the seven million players that you guys added sequentially coming into FIFA, can you shed some light on who these players are? Are they kind of casual French players just looking for something to time, not spending, not converting? Or are they the ones that you've seen payer conversion, ARPU in line with your legacy hardcore players that have been in there basically since a FY '11 playing FIFA Ultimate team. Anything you can say about the new players you're reactivating?

Blake Jorgensen -- Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer

Yes. It's hard to say. And Andrew, you can add to this. It just it's just early, right? So, you want to see a pattern over time.

But Andrew, go ahead and jump in.

Andrew Wilson -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes and you heard this a little bit in my prepared remarks. But it is early. The $7 million is made up of last haven't been for views and some completely new players. What I would tell you is, while it is early, and it is a little bit difficult to predict future behavior on these cohorts at this juncture, they are performing like some of our strongest and most engaged groups in the game.

And I think that's testament to the fact that this game does facilitate its connection to friends in connection of a sport and a live service that sits within that game is now so intrinsic to the experience and a big part of the joy that players get. And what the teams have done through this last quarter is spectacular in terms of their ability to entertain existing players, lapsed returning players and the new players and we're seeing those groups come together and perform in the same way that are traditionally very highly engaged strong play groups have. So we're -- to Blake's point, it's early. It's not easy to predict, but the early signs are very strong, and we're very optimistic about what this means for the FIFA community long term.

Ryan Gee -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Great. Thank you very much guys. 

Andrew Wilson -- Chief Executive Officer

Next question please. 

Operator

Your next question, he's already in queue, Mr. Michael Ng.

Michael Ng -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Thank you very much for the question. I just have two. The first is, I was wondering if you could just expand on your capital allocation plans, which you put on pause, at least with the buyback last quarter. Do you have plans to authorize a new buyback? And then the second question is, could you talk a little bit about how the seven million additional players that you added sequential in FIFA informs your expectation for FIFA 21 unit sales this year? Is it clear that, that should be up year over year from a units perspective because of the enlarged player base? Thank you.

Blake Jorgensen -- Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer

Yes. I mean, we're always assuming that if we bring new players in, we can most likely increase the player base and the future purchases. I would say right now, as you can see, we didn't take our guidance down for the back half of the year. We simply moved FIFA two weeks and as a quarterly change.

So I wouldn't take any of that as a message that we have moved or changed our forecast either way. It's just still too early to say on that. And so more to come, I think by the time we get to our second quarter earnings, we'll have a much better sense of do we think guidance is going to go up or down based on where both FIFA, Madden and hockey and UFC are tracking. But we're very optimistic about all those.

On capital allocation, we paused our program because we felt like at the time, we didn't restart a new program because we were at the end of our old program. We felt like it was not the right time to send a message, both externally, as well as internally into our company that we were starting a new program until we got through this pandemic and had a little feeling about how things would look in the future. And I think we're closer now. I can't tell you when we would restart a program.

There is no doubt that there is a commitment to have a program. It's really a timing issue and it's a timing issue driven by the COVID situation. And I think that's pretty consistent with almost every company out there. There's only a couple of companies that have started new programs in the last quarter.

And so that's the answer. There's no change in our thinking. We believe we want to effectively and always be returning capital to shareholders. As you saw, we had the greatest cash flow we've ever had as a company over the last 12 months.

We know that we should be returning some of that on a large portion to the shareholders. And so expect you'll hear something from us in the future. I just can't predict exactly when that's going to happen.

Operator

And your last question comes from the line of Brian Nowak with Morgan Stanley.

Matt Cost -- Morgan Stanley--Analyst

It's Matt on for Brian. So can you talk a little bit about the difference in behavior, if any, that you're seeing between your users in the U.S. and Europe? I know we've spent a lot of time in the Q&A talking about potential phasing and how it's kind of obviously really hard to tell the sort of retention and behavior you're going to see on players at this stage. But to some extent, many European countries that are a little bit ahead in North America in terms of where they are reopening post COVID.

So are you seeing a market difference in the behavior of those users? Are they dropping off more? And one of your competitors talk last week weakness in Europe relative to the U.S.? And is that something that is consistent with what you're seeing? And then I have a follow up. Thanks.

Blake Jorgensen -- Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer

Yes. What I would say is, one, I'll let Andrew jump in here, but if you see a trend for a week, you should be really careful because it may not be a trend for three or four weeks. And the European economies are all going through very different swings. Spain is obviously going through another jump in COPD cases.

And so you want to be really careful. Also, every game is different. So the trends in FIFA aren't going to necessarily match the trends in wherever the competitor was that they said was slowing or versus any other game. So I'll let Andrew jump in and he going to say something, it sounds like.

Andrew Wilson -- Chief Executive Officer

No. I would just say, I would echo Blake's comments. I would also point to the performance of FIFA throughout last quarter, and we saw tremendous engagement through the quarter. And I think Blake spoke to kind of a peak and that we've seen some change in that, but the engagement through FIFA and other games has been very, very strong throughout the entire quarter and continues even now to be much, much stronger than it would be typically at this time of the year.

And so, to Blake's point, I think it's too early to tell what we have seen in our games is continued strong engagement. And we believe that, that's because we are providing, particularly as it relates to FIFA in Europe, that emotional connection to football that was missing. And what we saw is football came back online, at least somewhat in Europe, is that further bolstered that emotional connection to the sport that was able to provide. So too early to tell, but we've seen continued strong engagement even in Europe as some of those markets have gone back online.

Matt Cost -- Morgan Stanley--Analyst

Great. And then just on the topic of working from home, obviously, we're much further in now to the process of everyone getting up the curve of learning how to operate in this environment. Have you learned anything new? Are there any changes the way that you guys are thinking about having workforce, working from home, any new challenges? I know there were some public comments from some people respond that maybe there were some challenges that they hadn't with Just any thoughts that you have there?

Andrew Wilson -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. everybody on this call is working from home and there are many great benefits to working from home as it turns out. We've cut down our permute time tremendously. We don't travel as much.

We have the opportunity to spend more time with our families. And in some cases, I think we are significantly more productive work home environment as it relates to our efficiency levels. At the same time, I think we would all acknowledge that there are other components of work from home that are very challenging. Home schooling is challenging.

The mental and emotional well-being can be challenged if you're spending all your time in one place. I think as an organization, we've remained committed to our employees. We are providing financial assistance, mental and physical and emotional assistance. We're offering flexibility in work hours wherever possible and offering caregiver leave as members of our employee base think about home schooling or caring for family and loved ones.

I think there's a lot of things that we've learned. I don't think we'll ever go back exactly to the way things were. But at the same time, I don't think we would ever move to a place where the entire workforce would work from home. I do believe there is a kinetic energy that comes from being creative people together in a building, at least for some part of the time.

And again, we're just a few months into this. As I said in my prepared remarks, we will likely all likelihood and what we've communicated to employers that most of us will be work from home through the rest of this calendar year, at which point we'll reevaluate. And that we are being very open in our dialogue and communication with employees. And to the extent that there are things that we can do to help them through this process or to the extent that there might be longer-term changes that we might make, we're opening up that dialogue and having those conversations now.

So not much a share at this point in terms of long-term changes other than there will likely be some, but those some probably won't involve the entire workforce staying work from home

Blake Jorgensen -- Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer

Yes. And the only thing I'd add to that is, I just remind people to go back, and on net bookings, our live services was $1.103 billion, up $416 million from the prior year. Most of our revenue for the quarter was live services. And live services require people to be doing something every single day.

We're running events every week. We're developing new characters. We're developing new content. We're changing things.

We're managing security, managing monetization. That is as hard as game development is the fact that we have proven in the quarter that we could show live service growth like we have. I mean, Andrew and I, every morning wake up and realize we are unbelievably blessed with an incredible workforce that has figured out how to do this. Because as I said earlier, there's no playbook that how do you run how do you run Ultimate Team or Apex from home.

No one's ever and it just shows the strength of this organization and the commitment that people have to drive the business in ways that they've never thought they could. And that's pretty powerful. And so for anybody who's over-indexing on us moving FIFA out of second quarter to third quarter, I just suggest, go back and just think about $1.1 billion in live services in the quarter. That is amazing.

And so that's why I think what we're trying to send a signal to people is we don't like the fact that we had to get here for the COVID virus, but we've proven that this is something that's really special. 

Operator

[Operator signoff]

Duration: 62 minutes

Call participants:

Andrew Wilson -- Chief Executive Officer

Blake Jorgensen -- Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer

Mario Lu -- Barclays -- Analyst

Chris Evenden -- Vice President, Global Marketing Communications

Todd Juenger -- Sanford C. Bernstein -- Analyst

Ryan Gee -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Michael Ng -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Matt Cost -- Morgan Stanley--Analyst

More EA analysis

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GM's electric vehicle battery-cell plant moves closer to reality | News, Sports, Jobs - The Steubenville Herald-Star

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Electronic whistles will be available to officials in 2020 - Yahoo Sports

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The coronavirus spreads through the expulsion of droplets from the nose and mouth. Blowing into a whistle entails, duh, expelling droplets from the mouth. Thus, the NFL has an optional replacement for the whistle this year.

Per a source with knowledge of the situation, officials will be given the option to use a hand-held electronic device that, when a button is pressed, will “blow” the whistle.

It’s not a mandatory replacement for the whistle. Those who choose to use a whistle would blow it in conjunction with a face covering, to minimize the spread of droplets.

It’s smart to make an electronic option available (as long as any inadvertent button-pressing can be kept to a minimum), and it’s another reason why football will look very different in 2020.

Electronic whistles will be available to officials in 2020 originally appeared on Pro Football Talk

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Plug It In: Electric Car Charging Station Numbers Are Rising - The New York Times

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DETROIT — When the electric car revolution arrives, will there be enough places to plug in?

There are now 26,000 electric vehicle charging stations open to the public in the U.S., with more than 84,000 plugs.

But the country, and the world, will need thousands more if drivers are going to adopt vehicles powered by batteries alone. And because they’re being asked to invest before that demand arrives, automakers and charging companies are struggling to raise the numbers.

Currently electric vehicles make up only about 1.3% of total new vehicle sales in the U.S., according to the Edmunds.com auto site. Electrics are much bigger in other countries, accounting for 2.6% of global new vehicle sales last year, the International Energy Agency says.

With more than 40 fully electric vehicles on the market in the U.S. or coming within the next three years, however, auto and charging company executives say the demand is on the way.

“The automakers, more and more of them, are committing to manufacture electric vehicles,” said Mike Moran, spokesman for Electrify America, a network of charging stations being built with $2 billion in settlement money from Volkswagen’s diesel emissions cheating scandal. “Last year automakers announced a combined $225 billion in investments in electrification.”

On Friday, General Motors and charging company EVGo announced plans to add about 700 fast-charging stations, tripling the number on the EVGo network over the next five years. They wouldn’t say how much they’ll invest, but plan to add 2,700 fast-charging plugs.

They’ll focus on 40 unspecified metropolitan areas, with emphasis on California, Texas, Florida and Illinois. And they’ll build the stations near where people go to run errands, like grocery stores or pharmacies. Typically a fast-charger can refill a battery in 30-40 minutes, so the idea is for charging to be done while people are shopping.

“We’ve done extensive consumer research in understanding what’s important to the customer,” GM CEO Mary Barra said. “Clearly having a robust charging infrastructure is something that our customers have told us is important.”

Detroit-based GM says it’s moving away from the internal combustion engine to an all-electric future, and it plans to roll out 20 new electric vehicles globally by 2023. Crosstown rival Ford has an all-electric SUV coming with 300 miles (480 kilometers) of range, and it’s planning a fully electric version of the F-150 pickup, the nation’s top-selling vehicle.

Fast-charging stations have higher kilowatt capacities than home chargers, and they’re important to quickly recharge batteries on newer electric vehicles that can travel 300 or more miles on a single charge. But the bulk of the nation’s public charging network is much slower. The U.S. Department of Energy says there are 3,884 public fast-charging stations in the country now with 14,858 outlets.

As more electric vehicles are sold, more fast chargers will be needed, especially for people who live in apartment buildings who can’t charge at home, said Cathy Zoi, EVGo’s CEO.

The 2,700 new fast-charging outlets will start to become available early next year. GM and EVGo say they’ll invest in the outlets, but many will be built with funding from utilities, governments and public-private partnerships.

More public charging stations will allow GM and other automakers to better compete with Tesla, which now leads the world in electric vehicle sales and has its own private network of fast-charging stations. Tesla has network of 1,971 charging stations with 17,467 outlets worldwide. A U.S. number wasn't available.

Electrify America now has over 450 charging stations in the U.S. with more than 2,000 fast-charging outlets, Moran said. It plans to have 800 stations and about 3,500 outlets by the end of next year.

Guidehouse analyst Sam Abuelsamid said the number of chargers is increasing rapidly and should be enough to meet demand as more electric vehicles are sold. A big problem now is that each network has its own payment system, so owners need multiple accounts to access all chargers, he said. But Ford, GM and others are working to aggregate all the networks into one account.

“As more and more vehicles come to market that support faster charging and have longer ranges, especially with aggregating, enabling roaming, that’s where I think it will start to make a difference,” he said.

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Electronic Arts Posted a Record Quarter. Here's What Wall Street Is Saying. - Barron's

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Electronic Arts reported its best fiscal first-quarter on record—an impressive feat, given the publisher only launched two full games during the period.

With consumers staying home to slow the spread of Covid-19, EA’s quarterly earnings and revenue crushed expectations. Its outlook for the fiscal second quarter was a bit of a disappointment compared with consensus estimates, but Blake Jorgensen, the company’s chief financial officer and chief operating officer, noted the company pushed back the launch of FIFA 21 to the third quarter to give developers a bit more time amid the new work-from-home reality. The company raised its full-year outlook.

According to FactSet, about a dozen analysts raised their price targets following the earnings report. Despite all the price target raises, and the stock hitting a 52-week high around 9:40 a.m., EA shares (ticker: EA) were down 0.3% at 12:46 p.m. on Friday. Shares of peers Activision Blizzard (ATVI) and Take-Two Interactive Software (TTWO) both pared back some gains, but were still positive early Friday afternoon. The S&P 500 index was down 0.6%.

Analysts touted big-time growth for the live services category. Live services are digital offerings available after a game is purchased. One of FIFA 20 and Madden 20’s popular modes is Ultimate Team, which lets players purchase virtual trading card packs they can use to construct custom teams and compete online.

During EA’s earnings call, Jorgensen said its first-quarter Ultimate Team revenue grew 70% year-over-year, on a like-for-like basis. Jorgensen noted that sports fans used Ultimate Team as a kind of social network, playing and connecting with friends amid the pandemic. With live sports out of the picture the past few months, he said users doubled down on such services.

“While we always want live sports to go on because it helps feed the engagement and excitement around the business, we also know sports fans are not going to stop being sports fans if the underlying sports stops,” he said. “And I think the first quarter proves that better than anything we’ve ever seen.”

Jefferies analyst Alex Giaimo, who has a Hold rating on the stock, wrote in a note on Thursday that the report has made him more positive on EA stock. He raised his price target to $155 from $140.

“We would prefer a slight pullback before becoming more constructive, but acknowledge that execution has dramatically improved with increased stay-at-home activity acting as the catalyst EA needed,” he wrote.

Piper Sandler analyst Yung Kim raised his price target to $157 from $133 and maintained an Overweight rating. He noted the company entered the year having to manage its launch lineup around no Battlefield release, originally a disappointment for investors.

“But amid Covid, videogames at large and EA titles in particular have become top options for new and lapsed players,” he wrote. “Apex, Sims, FIFA and Madden Ultimate Teams, as well as FIFA Online each continue to outperform, buoying expectations for the next round of EA Sports titles (Madden, FIFA, NHL and UFC) as well as Star Wars: Squadrons.”

J.P. Morgan analyst Alexia Quadrani raised her price target on the stock to $150 from $127 and maintained an Overweight rating.

“We think these results are attributable as much to execution as they are to any tailwinds from shelter-in-place orders around the world, as EA reaps the benefit of heightened engagement after years of investing into live services content and improving the player experience,” she wrote in a note on Friday.

She pointed to comments from management that implied the company’s full-year guidance may be conservative, based on macroeconomic uncertainty.

“However, management did acknowledge reasons to be optimistic, noting the company has added tens of millions of players across its portfolio of games since the beginning of April, with FIFA alone attracting 7 [million] new players during the quarter,” she wrote.

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GM, EVgo to install 2,700 electric-vehicle charging stations - The Detroit News

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Detroit — General Motors Co. and EVgo, a public electric-vehicle charging network, are joining forces to add 2,700 electric-vehicle fast-chargers to the network to spur adoption of the vehicles across the U.S.

The installation, which will take place in the next five years, will triple the size of EVgo's charging network with charging stations being added in 40 metropolitan areas to provide charging access to potential electric-vehicle drivers who rent their homes and can't install chargers, who live in apartments or condos, or who don't have charging stations at work. 

The move shows yet another commitment by GM to make electric vehicles more accessible by removing barriers created by cost and range anxiety. GM and LG Chem are constructing a battery-cell manufacturing site in northeast Ohio to help with the cost and have developed a new battery that will give their vehicles more range.

"It demonstrates our commitment to making sure customers have everything they need to accelerate the adoption of EVs," GM CEO and Chairman Mary Barra said on a call with media Friday. "We have said that we will partner, invest and look for all opportunities to make sure there's a robust charging infrastructure. Our partnership that we're announcing today with EVgo is a proof point that we believe very strongly that they both have to come together because in order to have confidence to have an EV as your only vehicle you have to know there's robust and fast charging available."

GM and EVgo didn't quantify their investment amount to install the chargers.  

The chargers will be available to all electric-vehicle users, not just those who drive GM cars.

The new charging stations, added to EVgo's existing 800 in 34 states, will be installed at the places consumers regularly frequent, including grocery stores, retail outlets and entertainment centers. EVgo and GM have identified 40 metropolitan areas to place the chargers.

There are several criteria used to decide where to place them, EVgo CEO Cathy Zoi said, including places where there's a shortage of capacity, where EV sales are growing quickly and where it's believed their sales will start to grow.

"We're partnering to build over 2,700 new fast chargers across the country, that's a significant amount of effort and investment and we're accelerating the time to market again to create the comfort that prospective EV drivers know that they're going to have charging available where they are," Zoi said on a call with media Friday.

The chargers will be available starting in early 2021. They will be located in visible areas and most will be able to charge at least four vehicles simultaneously. The cost to charge typically runs $5 to $15, Zoi said. 

The Detroit automaker expects to spend $20 billion through 2025 on electric and autonomous vehicle development. Next week it's unveiling the new Cadillac Lyriq, an electric crossover. In the fall, GM will show off its GMC Hummer EV. GM is pushing to have 20 electric vehicle nameplates on the market globally by 2023. Its Detroit-Hamtramck plant will be the first all-electric assembly plant for GM. It will produce the Hummer EV and Cruise Origin, an autonomous electric shuttle. 

The battery-cell manufacturing plant GM is building in Ohio will make battery cells for its new Ultium batteries, which GM claims are unique because the large-format pouch-style cells can be stacked vertically or horizontally inside the battery pack, allowing designers to optimize battery storage and layout for each vehicle.

GM estimates the Ultium battery could provide a range of up to 400 miles or more on a full charge. In comparison, the 2020 model Bolt hitting dealerships later this year offers a claimed 259 miles of range on a full charge.

In January 2019, GM announced it would collaborate with EVgo, ChargePoint and Greenlots to gain access to their charging networks for GM electric vehicle owners to know where to charge.

khall@detroitnews.com

Twitter: @bykaleahall

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GM Works With EVgo on Fast Charging Stations for Electric Vehicles - Barron's

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Electric vehicles are coming. General Motors (ticker: GM) is partnering with EVgo, adding more than 2,700 fast charging stations over the next five years to “accelerate widespread adoption electric vehicle adoption.”

¿How rapidly the shift happens might be the most important automotive question of the coming decade.

GM, for its part, is very focused on electric-vehicle technology now. Earlier in 2020, the company hosted a battery-technology day, touting technology that allows a vehicle to go 400 miles on one charge. GM works with LG Chem (051910. Korea) on its battery platform.

The 400-mile barrier is a big deal. Only Tesla (TSLA) has a car that goes that far on one charge, based on official Environmental Protection Agency ratings.

EVgo has about 800 stations today, while there are more than 31,000 charging stations in the U.S. and Canada, according to the Energy Department. There are more than 4,700 fast charging stations, where consumer can get more power in less time.

There are, for comparison, more than 100,000 gas stations in America. EV owners, however, can also “fill up” at home by plugging vehicles in.

“We are moving quickly to bring new EVs to market that customers will love,” GM CEO Mary Barra said in the company’s news release. “Our relationship with EVgo will bolster the public fast charging network available to EV customers ahead of increased market demand and reinforce our commitment to an all-electric, zero-emissions future.”

GM highlighted several other EV-related actions it is taking in the Friday news release. The first Cadillac EV—named Lyriq—will be revealed next week on Aug. 6. The company is also converting its Detroit Hamtramck plant to all EV production. The GMC Hummer EV starts rolling of that production line in 2021. And a new Chevy Bolt is coming out in 2021.

How fast EVs will increase their share of the market is debated on Wall Street. It is an important number—maybe the most critical—for determining the value of EV-related stocks.

“EV is a trillion dollar market that is 3% penetrated and investors are playing this trend,” Wedbush analyst Dan Ives tells Barron’s.

At that level of penetration EVs are, very roughly, a hundred billion dollar business. How fast they can reach a trillion is, well, the million-dollar question.

The most bullish estimates have EV’s taking, perhaps, 50% of the global market in a decade. That would be roughly 50 million light vehicles, up 20- to 30-fold compared with 2019. That works out to about 40% average annual growth.

Can the industry do it? It’s too early to tell, but car makers are trying.

Volkswagen (VOW. Germany), BMW (BMW. Germany), as well as GM and Ford Motor (F), to name a few, have made big bets on EVs. Tesla, for its part is building more factories and should have capacity to produce 1.5 million to 2 million vehicles around the end of 2021. The company has a plant going up in Berlin and another is slated for Austin, Texas.

Demand , of course, is the other side of the capacity coin. Governments offer tax credits for EV purchases. And there are other incentives that influence pricing.

Tesla, for instance, sold more than $400 million worth of regulatory credits to other auto makers during the second quarter. The company gets the credits by producing more zero-emissions cars than environmental mandates require it to; U.S. state laws, as well as European Union rules, allow it to generate cash by selling the credits to rivals who fall short of their targets.

That’s good, but for EVs to really take over, battery costs have to come down further. Eventually, batteries and an electric motor need to cost the same as a gasoline engine, transmission, and fuel tank. Right now, EVs cost more up front, although there are fuel and maintenance savings that accrue to buyers over the long run.

Battery costs are coming down. Steve Schrader, CFO at the electric van maker Workhorse (WKHS), told Barron’s that battery costs have fallen by roughly 70% over the past decade. Larger-scale manufacturing along with research and development have helped with the reductions.

Tesla hosts its own battery-technology day in September and will likely provide an update about costs.

GM stock is down about 32% year to date, worse than comparable returns on the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average over the same span.

EV stocks, on the other hand, are on fire. EV makers Barron’s tracks—including Tesla, NIO (NIO) and Nikola (NKLA), among others—are up about 190% year to date on average.

Once it becomes clearer how fast EVs will penetrate the market, investors can move on to picking what companies will win and which will lose during the shift.

Write to Al Root at allen.root@dowjones.com

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Fisker's electric crossover SUV is inspired by California - Los Angeles Times

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In 2005, Henrik Fisker rested alone on a Malibu beach, contemplating the sunset.

Inspired by the sun, the sky, the ocean waves, he opened his sketchpad. The Denmark native, long in love with Southern California, drew a circle and divided it horizontally. The top, orange, the bottom, blue. Two vertical lines would stand for the designer’s pen and the engineer’s ruler.

For the record:

9:18 AM, Jul. 31, 2020An earlier version of this article described Henrik Fisker designing the logo for his company in 2015, in between the bankruptcy of Fisker Automotive and the launch of Fisker. That episode took place in 2005. Both companies have used the same logo.

He thought to himself, he said in an interview with The Times, “We’re going to take a step further than everyone out there trying to make electric cars.”

It’s been a long road. His start-up electric car company Fisker Automotive went bust in 2013. He pursued other projects, including a “super yacht.” Now he’s got a new company called, simply, Fisker.

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You may say he’s a dreamer — and many have. But with stocks on a rocket ride and traders in a frenzy to get in on the electrified future, Fisker, based in Los Angeles, is poised to raise billions to try to make its namesake’s visions real.

The immediate object of his desire — and, he hopes, the desire of hundreds of thousands of others — is the Fisker Ocean, a battery-powered compact SUV that will seek to distinguish itself in a soon-to-be-crowded field. It’s due out in 2022.

Fisker is counting on a California-inspired environmental ethos to set the Ocean apart. A “vegan” (no leather) interior will include recycled materials — old tires, plastic bottles, recovered plastic from the ocean, even old fishing nets; an optional rooftop solar panel will boost range (if it works as planned); the press of a single button will put the car in “California Mode,” lowering all windows at once, including the window on the rear hatch, to let as much air in as possible for cruises along the coastline and other pleasant locales.

The Fisker logo

The Fisker logo

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That unusual functional rear hatch window, designed to allow the owner to slide in a surfboard, captures the aesthetic Fisker’s seeking to evoke. “Southern California for me is a leader and trendsetter when it comes to health and environment,” he said. “I think California is the best place to develop new products. People are more risky, more willing to try stuff out.”

Another key differentiator, one that draws the skeptics, is the base price: $37,499 before government incentives, or $379 a month for a lease, both low for a near-luxury vehicle that will compete with the likes of the Tesla Model Y, the Jaguar I-Pace, the upcoming Volvo XC40 Recharge and Polestar 2, and several others, with base prices well above that level.

With such a goal, “it’s hard to take Fisker seriously,” said Jessica Caldwell, market analyst at Edmunds. “The vehicle they’re promising seems very ambitious,” with a range of 250 to 300 miles and luxurious appointments. If selling such a car for under $40,000 were possible, “it seems people would have already tried to go down that route.”

The base Tesla Model 3 fits that range and pricing, but its interior is deliberately bare-bones, not luxurious.

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Few people are buying the base version of such cars, however. Fisker will sell Ocean models that range as high as $70,000, including a high-performance off-road version.

Fisker said he can keep the price low with a deal he’s negotiating with Volkswagen. VW, the legacy automaker that’s made the deepest commitment to electric cars, has created a common platform for vehicles called the MEB, or Modularer E-Antriebs-Baukasten, consisting of a chassis and drivetrain. The German automaker plans to sell MEB to other companies, and Fisker intends to take advantage of the economies of scale.

Fisker plans to keep capital costs low by using extra capacity at an existing automaker’s plant, although no such deal has yet been announced. Fisker engineers had been working on breakthrough solid-state battery technology, but the Ocean will use commodity lithium ion batteries, aided by a Fisker-developed battery management software system.

Henrik Fisker is known in industry circles as a top-flight automobile designer. A graduate of the world-renowned ArtCenter College of Design in Pasadena, the soon-to-be 57-year-old had designed Aston Martins and BMWs, including the swoopy BMW Z8.

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Founded in 2007, his previous company’s main product was a plug-in hybrid supercar, the $130,000 Fisker Karma. Movie stars and hedge fund millionaires were among the customers. A 2012 Karma is part of the permanent collection at the Petersen Automotive Museum in Los Angeles.

Crippling battery problems eventually sunk the company. Issues within A123, Fisker Automotive’s sole battery supplier, caused a production halt for the Karma, which forced Fisker into bankruptcy. The company was later sold to Chinese investors, and a follow-on version of the car, the Karma Revero, is produced in small quantities by a company located in Irvine called Karma Automotive.

Now Fisker is about to raise $2.9 billion through a somewhat unusual mechanism called a “special-purpose acquisition company,” or SPAC, also known as a “blank check.”

It works this way: Rather than do a standard initial public offering of stock, investors form an empty-vessel company and take it public. The new entity seeks a company to acquire and engineers a merger. Usually the name of the company is changed to the acquired company, and the stock ticker is changed as well. In mid-July, the blank-check deal was announced by its backer, Apollo Global Management, one of the world’s largest private equity firms. The merger is expected to take place within months.

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It’s a juicy time for blank-check deals, especially with market values so high for electric vehicle companies.

Nikola Corp., a Phoenix company that plans to make electric fuel-cell semi trucks but has no trucks to sell yet, announced a $3.3-billion blank-check deal in March, with the merger completed in June. Its market value reached as high as $65 billion and since has settled at about $30 billion.

Tesla, the electric-car maker that’s been around since 2003, makes a profit right now only through sales of government emission credits, not on cars. Yet its market value is currently hovering around $275 billion, making it the most valuable car company in the world, with only 4% market share.

Tesla‘s stock is so high in part because investors believe in Elon Musk’s vision of a future of autonomous electric robotaxis with Tesla as the dominant market player. If that ever happens, it’s a long way off.

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Fisker investors are betting on a more immediate proposition: the Ocean actually appearing in 2022 and immediately grabbing a big chunk of the electric crossover market. Still, $2.9 billion is a hefty wager on a vehicle that, not long ago, was nothing more than a bit of California dreaming.

“This is the way the world works” right now, said Edmunds’ Caldwell. “You can promise anything in two years.”

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