EV Roundup: WKHS' Quarterly Results, NIO-CATL Alliance Draw Attention

EV Roundup: WKHS' Quarterly Results, NIO-CATL Alliance Draw Attention

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The commercial electric vehicle (EV) developer Workhorse Group Inc. WKHS reported mixed fourth-quarter 2023 results and is implementing a reduction in force, impacting 20% of its total workforce, excluding direct labor positions.

The EV behemoth Tesla TSLA plans to manufacture its electric semi-truck at Gigafactory Berlin. It also decided to raise the prices of Model Y cars in the United States and Europe.

Japanese auto biggies Nissan NSANY and Honda HMC have partnered to develop economical EVs and compete with China-based auto giants.

Lastly, the Chinese EV maker NIO Inc. NIO also made it to the top stories as it collaborates with CATL to develop batteries lasting up to 15 years, doubling the current national warranty standard.

While WKHS carries a Zacks Rank #2 (Buy), NIO currently holds a Zacks Rank #4 (Sell). Meanwhile, TSLA and HMC each currently carry a Zacks Rank #3 (Hold). You can see the complete list of today’s Zacks #1 Rank (Strong Buy) stocks here.

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Workhorse reported an adjusted loss of 18 cents per share for the fourth quarter of 2023, wider than the Zacks Consensus Estimate of a loss of 11 cents. The company had incurred an adjusted loss of 24 cents in the year-ago quarter. It generated net revenues of $4.41 million, which surpassed the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $3 million. Revenues rose 29.4% year over year due to increased sales volume and revenue contributions from Stables by Workhorse and DaaS. As of Dec 31, 2023, Workhorse had $25.8 million in cash and cash equivalents, down from $99.3 million as of Dec 31, 2022.

As part of its cost-saving initiative, the company has decided to shift its Aero business to a Drones-as-a-Service model, which needs less capital investment. It has also decided to significantly reduce its headcount. WKHS is currently implementing a reduction in force, impacting 20% of its total workforce, excluding direct labor positions. The company will also be reducing headcounts in its Aero division. As part of Workhorse's cost-containment efforts, its executive officers have consented to defer 20% of their cash compensation for at least three months.

Tesla plans to produce Tesla Semi, its electric semi-truck, at Gigafactory Berlin. The automaker’s announcement to produce Tesla Semi at Gigafactory Berlin reflects Elon Musk’s commitment to expanding the European factory despite facing massive resistance from Grünheide locals. Per the expansion plan, Gigafactory Berlin aims to build another plant to increase the annual production capacity of the factory to one million units from the current capacity of 500,000 units. Currently, Tesla Semi is in low-volume production in a plant outside Gigafactory Nevada.