The Business Times

NIO CEO pledges to improve finances as Tesla challenge looms

Published Mon, Dec 30, 2019 · 09:50 PM

Shenzhen

THE head of NIO Inc pledged an improvement in the struggling Chinese electric carmaker's finances as demand picks up and the company's cost-cutting efforts start to bear fruit.

NIO's sport utility vehicles will be competitive not just against other electric models, but all premium cars in the same price range, said William Li, NIO's co-founder and chief executive officer. Meanwhile expense reductions will help NIO's gross margin to widen in 2020, Mr Li said.

"I am very confident of our products' competitiveness," Mr Li said in Shenzhen, China, on Sunday. "There are many concerns in the market, but our sales are real."

NIO has accumulated a deficit of almost US$6 billion since its founding in 2014, spending extensively on marketing and product development for a foothold in the burgeoning market. Third-quarter earnings, due to be released this week, are expected to show there's still a long way to profitability.

While NIO has cut jobs and started to scale back marketing expenditures, its finances remain critically strained. China's electric car market is slowing as the government reduces subsidies, and competition is getting tougher with Tesla preparing to start deliveries of its China-built Model 3 sedans.

"NIO's balance sheet implies serious liquidity risk," said Robin Zhu, an analyst at Sanford C Bernstein in Hong Kong with an underperform rating on the stock. "The key will be whether they are able to announce major new financing."

Shares of NIO have plunged 61 per cent since the company had its initial public offering in New York last year. That's left it with a market value of US$2.5 billion, compared with Tesla's market capitalisation of about US$78 billion.

On Saturday, NIO officially unveiled the EC6 SUV, the third major product in its lineup. Pricing for the model, which has a large glass roof, will be announced in July, and deliveries are set to start after that.

To further fuel demand, the company has launched promotional incentives including 0 per cent interest for three years and guaranteed subsidies for cars registered before the end of February 2020. NIO's sales will probably rise 44 per cent next year to 29,973 vehicles, research firm LMC Automotive predicts.

Yet losses will probably continue to mount: for 2020, the average loss estimate is US$1.2 billion on revenue of US$1.7 billion, according to analysts' predictions compiled by Bloomberg. The loss for the third quarter ended last September was probably US$381 million, the average estimate shows.

"Our cost-cutting effort is still underway," Mr Li said. "But we can see a further reduction in expenses in the first quarter of 2020."

To curb spending, the company has shifted from adding NIO Houses - fancy showrooms with users' lounges - to setting up much smaller stores called NIO Spaces. By the end of the third quarter, NIO had cut its staff to 7,800 from 9,900 in January.

With just about US$500 million in cash, equivalents and short-term investments as of June 30, NIO has had to take steps to fill up its coffers. It said in September that Mr Li and shareholder Tencent Holdings Ltd had each agreed to subscribe to US$100 million in convertible notes. BLOOMBERG

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