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Thread: Canoo

  1. #251

    Default Re: Canoo

    There has been conjecture that the few complete vehicles they have produced were not even assembled in OKC.

    With fledgling public companies, you often never know the full truth because they lean very heavily on the fake-it-until-you-make-it strategy. The need to give the appearance they can start cranking out cars so they can get contracts and without the contracts they can't get the capital to produce cars... It's all very circular.

  2. #252

    Default Re: Canoo

    Quote Originally Posted by Pete View Post
    There has been conjecture that the few complete vehicles they have produced were not even assembled in OKC.

    With fledgling public companies, you often never know the full truth because they lean very heavily on the fake-it-until-you-make-it strategy. The need to give the appearance they can start cranking out cars so they can get contracts and without the contracts they can't get the capital to produce cars... It's all very circular.
    Elon musk has said that efficient mass production is the hardest thing. Its easier to throw out a 100 or 200 prototype vehicles.

  3. #253

    Default Re: Canoo

    Quote Originally Posted by jn1780 View Post
    Elon musk has said that efficient mass production is the hardest thing. Its easier to throw out a 100 or 200 prototype vehicles.
    And even Tesla continues to have issues with quality control.

    BTW, Hyundai just this week launched a brand new modular line of EV work vehicles, where a standard chassis and cab can accommodate all types of rear components, and the Koreans are absolutely killing it in the EV world.

    There are some huge, sophisticated companies already cranking out hundreds of thousands of vehicles; I've said it before but I just don't see the market for Canoo. What purchasing agent is going to take a flyer on an EV startup when a bunch have already failed or are in the process (like Fisker) instead of going with Mercedes, Ford or Hyundai/Kia??

  4. #254

    Default Re: Canoo

    Quote Originally Posted by Pete View Post
    And even Tesla continues to have issues with quality control.

    BTW, Hyundai just this week launched a brand new modular line of EV work vehicles, where a standard chassis and cab can accommodate all types of rear components, and the Koreans are absolutely killing it in the EV world.

    There are some huge, sophisticated companies already cranking out hundreds of thousands of vehicles; I've said it before but I just don't see the market for Canoo. What purchasing agent is going to take a flyer on an EV startup when a bunch have already failed or are in the process (like Fisker) instead of going with Mercedes, Ford or Hyundai/Kia??
    Yeah, and those Canoo vans don't seem very 'sexy' compared to what everyone else is producing. I guess they were trying to go after a work van type of niche.

  5. #255

    Default Re: Canoo

    It's too bad because I was actually pretty pumped to buy one of their personal vehicles whether it was the pickup truck, which I thought was extremely utilitarian or the 7-seater, which made me nostalgic for my aunt's old 1980 something station wagon where the thing sat 6 kids in the back facing one another. Good times in that car. I also thought the modular design and especially the battery would be about the best way you could bet on an affordable battery replacement in the future.

    I think the design and concept were great. The execution has been lackluster.

    And here Oklahoma sits again, hat in hand, willing to sell its soul to an employer to just pleas locate here when we can't just do the obvious stupid thing, i.e., invest in an educated workforce.

  6. #256

    Default Re: Canoo

    I think the window has closed. If they were actually producing at this point, I think they could still have a narrow shot, but if the plant isn't actually running at all like people are saying then it's over. I'm sure they'll continue to waste money and put out some flashy press releases, and maybe even break ground on a new facility in Pryor, but it's hopeless if they aren't up and running at this point. Like Pete said, the legacy manufacturers will eat them alive when they actually start producing for the American market. Just need some economical choices besides the super expensive giant trucks (eg Ford Lightning). Give me a basic, cheap, EV commuter car please. One that isn't full of spyware, won't explode in a collision, and can be controlled without a touch screen please.

  7. #257

    Default Re: Canoo

    Quote Originally Posted by Midtowner View Post
    It's too bad because I was actually pretty pumped to buy one of their personal vehicles whether it was the pickup truck, which I thought was extremely utilitarian or the 7-seater, which made me nostalgic for my aunt's old 1980 something station wagon where the thing sat 6 kids in the back facing one another. Good times in that car. I also thought the modular design and especially the battery would be about the best way you could bet on an affordable battery replacement in the future.

    I think the design and concept were great. The execution has been lackluster.

    And here Oklahoma sits again, hat in hand, willing to sell its soul to an employer to just pleas locate here when we can't just do the obvious stupid thing, i.e., invest in an educated workforce.
    The obvious and super frustrating part is yes, 1000% turns out high quality education pays off and our nextdoor neighbor that we are so jealous of has understood that for a VERY long time and for some reason it has never rubbed off. Also, we absolutely lost a couple of larger deals (and this is not speculation it is fact) because of a political climate and legislation that is just flat out bad for business. I don't want to get in a right vs left kind of thing and I know it's not allowed here, but fact is, the larger the business, the more they will 100% require a legal climate that gives them the widest range of relocation options, available workers and talent they can get and the last 5-10 years have produced some laws on the books that large international companies just absolutely prohibit for relocation, and I know for a fact a couple of very large companies have just literally said that in clear terms.

    I hire a lot of very high level CS engineers and EE's and it amazes me how flippant our government is to these segments and how little they understand that the cost of building a factory pales in comparison to the hassle and cost of securing the best of the best engineers. Oklahoma has got to get passed this "but we have cheap land" argument because in these spaces, if that's all you got, you got nothing.

  8. #258

    Default Re: Canoo

    Quote Originally Posted by EBAH View Post
    The obvious and super frustrating part is yes, 1000% turns out high quality education pays off and our nextdoor neighbor that we are so jealous of has understood that for a VERY long time and for some reason it has never rubbed off. Also, we absolutely lost a couple of larger deals (and this is not speculation it is fact) because of a political climate and legislation that is just flat out bad for business. I don't want to get in a right vs left kind of thing and I know it's not allowed here, but fact is, the larger the business, the more they will 100% require a legal climate that gives them the widest range of relocation options, available workers and talent they can get and the last 5-10 years have produced some laws on the books that large international companies just absolutely prohibit for relocation, and I know for a fact a couple of very large companies have just literally said that in clear terms.
    I think that's valid. 100%.

    I think our long term prospects at keeping Paycom might be looking a little iffy at this point. Its CEO has picked a fight with the very influential GOP lobbying group, OCPAC, and suddenly, Chad Richison is now no longer welcome at his alma mater, even after making a pretty substantial donation to improve the athletic facilities. Our state is eating its own. Our neighbor to the South has mastered the art of cosplaying as yeehaw buffoons to get reelected, but they also know that higher education is necessary to support industry and growth. Here in Oklahoma, we have poltiicians talking about cutting 100% of the higher ed budget. I can tell you Texas would never do something so dumb--or even talk about it out in the open. Even talk like that is going to scare away investment.

    And so now, we're left with companies like Canoo and it appears the State has just been a party to some overall pump and dump type scheme. Fortunately, we structured the deal around some solid metrics and the state isn't going to be left that much in the lurch. Maybe just a little embarrassed.

    But no one is going to want to locate a major plant here until Oklahoma's public education sector can get it together--and I don't mean by privatizing.


    I hire a lot of very high level CS engineers and EE's and it amazes me how flippant our government is to these segments and how little they understand that the cost of building a factory pales in comparison to the hassle and cost of securing the best of the best engineers. Oklahoma has got to get passed this "but we have cheap land" argument because in these spaces, if that's all you got, you got nothing.[/QUOTE]

  9. #259

    Default Re: Canoo

    Quote Originally Posted by Midtowner View Post
    I think that's valid. 100%.

    I think our long term prospects at keeping Paycom might be looking a little iffy at this point. Its CEO has picked a fight with the very influential GOP lobbying group, OCPAC, and suddenly, Chad Richison is now no longer welcome at his alma mater, even after making a pretty substantial donation to improve the athletic facilities. Our state is eating its own. Our neighbor to the South has mastered the art of cosplaying as yeehaw buffoons to get reelected, but they also know that higher education is necessary to support industry and growth. Here in Oklahoma, we have poltiicians talking about cutting 100% of the higher ed budget. I can tell you Texas would never do something so dumb--or even talk about it out in the open. Even talk like that is going to scare away investment.

    And so now, we're left with companies like Canoo and it appears the State has just been a party to some overall pump and dump type scheme. Fortunately, we structured the deal around some solid metrics and the state isn't going to be left that much in the lurch. Maybe just a little embarrassed.

    But no one is going to want to locate a major plant here until Oklahoma's public education sector can get it together--and I don't mean by privatizing.


    I hire a lot of very high level CS engineers and EE's and it amazes me how flippant our government is to these segments and how little they understand that the cost of building a factory pales in comparison to the hassle and cost of securing the best of the best engineers. Oklahoma has got to get passed this "but we have cheap land" argument because in these spaces, if that's all you got, you got nothing.
    i think there isn't much of a concern of paycom leaving. it's more i think an issue of if Chad continues to run the company he started. I heard it on pretty good authority that the naming of a Co-CEO of Chris Thomas back in Feburary, was not exactly Chad's idea... I think some of his outside the work comments and efforts is what is causing him to come back to the company more aggressively, and rightfully the board isn't happy about any of it.

  10. #260

    Default Re: Canoo

    With the OSDE refusing to share data with school ranking services, the race to be the call center/warehose leader among the 50 states will be realized.

  11. #261

    Default Re: Canoo

    Nvm
    Last edited by ComeOnBenjals!; 05-02-2024 at 10:01 AM. Reason: Duplicate

  12. #262

    Default Re: Canoo

    Quote Originally Posted by Jersey Boss View Post
    With the OSDE refusing to share data with school ranking services, the race to be the call center/warehose leader among the 50 states will be realized.
    I've lived in other states that value public education and higher ed and the results are tangible. Higher wages, better health outcomes, etc. Oklahoma seems content to land a Data Center or Call Center every year or so and really hype it up as a huge success. I think OKC/Tulsa are starting to have enough critical mass to help change this.. but state leadership doesn't seem invested at all.

  13. #263

    Default Re: Canoo

    Quote Originally Posted by ComeOnBenjals! View Post
    I've lived in other states that value public education and higher ed and the results are tangible. Higher wages, better health outcomes, etc. Oklahoma seems content to land a Data Center or Call Center every year or so and really hype it up as a huge success. I think OKC/Tulsa are starting to have enough critical mass to help change this.. but state leadership doesn't seem invested at all.
    as someone who grew up in rural Oklahoma, and didn't move to OKC until after college, i can tell you that you basically have to drag the rest of the state up, before they drag you down, because rural Oklahoma won't ever want change. And then they wonder why they keep losing population every year.

  14. #264

    Default Re: Canoo

    EV startup Canoo posts larger-than-expected loss in first quarter
    By Reuters
    May 14, 2024

    May 14 (Reuters) - Electric vehicle startup Canoo posted a larger-than-expected loss for the first quarter on Tuesday, but kept its outlook for the year unchanged.

    Slowing demand in the United States and stiff competition from Chinese EV makers in the world's largest auto market has hit demand for companies including Canoo.

    That has forced several startups to shut shop as investors have also grown cautious, making it difficult to raise more funds.

    EV startup Fisker had raised going concern doubts in February, followed by the delisting of its stock from the New York Stock exchange and the collapse of talks with a large automaker for a potential deal in March.

    Canoo first cautioned investors in 2022 that it had "substantial doubt" about continuing as a going concern and has since been raising capital to support production.

    Canoo's net loss widened to $110.7 million for the quarter ended March 31 from $90.7 million in the year-ago quarter. Analysts, on average, had expected a loss of $55.2 million, according to LSEG data.

    The Texas-based company's research and development expenses fell about 44%, helping lower operating expenses to $62.6 million from $81.5 million a year earlier.

    The company's cash and cash equivalents stood at $18.2 million as of March 31, up from $6.4 million at the end of December last year.
    Canoo, which went public in 2020 through a reverse merger with a special purpose acquisition company, is a supplier of electric delivery vans to Walmart and crew transportation vehicles to NASA.

  15. #265

    Default Re: Canoo

    Canoo continues to bleed money at an alarming rate.

    However, a much bigger drain will come when they actually start producing cars. Even big established players like Rivian and Fisker are losing something like $25K per vehicle they manufacture and sell.

    I'm sure this is the reason Canoo isn't actually building cars. I suppose they are looking for a massive cash infusion somehow or a buyout. Until then, they seem to be a zombie company.

  16. #266

    Default Re: Canoo

    Got excited as I saw the stock is at $2.56 then remembered they did a reverse split recently. Thought I was cashing in as I bought about at 10% of that

  17. #267

  18. #268

    Default Re: Canoo

    The end is near.

  19. #269

    Default Re: Canoo

    Quote Originally Posted by jn1780 View Post
    The end is near.
    Was there ever a start?

  20. #270

    Default Re: Canoo

    Quote Originally Posted by Pete View Post
    Was there ever a start?
    The start was the end.

  21. #271

    Default Re: Canoo

    Wait an electric car company going under. Wow shocking. Sarcasm by the way. I lived in Northern Indiana. Obama came twice to the small town of Wakarusa Indiana. They were going to make all these parts for electric cars. It was going to be the electric car capital of the world. 15 years later it's still a small town with a dollar general, McDonalds in a gas station not much else. https://wsbt.com/news/business/elkha...ctric-car-flop It's been going on for years.

  22. #272

    Default Re: Canoo

    Oh that suit is nothing - just an unpaid bill. A tiny crack within the chasms that have already blatantly been showing in this company's façade. I had actually forgotten about Canoo. Their window has passed on by. The last ounce of hope ran out earlier this year.

    Here is an article that explains a little better, they actually have an estimated $500k in unpaid bills and counting, but of course they are denying... https://okcfox.com/news/local/canoo-...ring-scheduled

    They have an earnings report on Aug 14. Will be interesting to hear if they have managed to do anything with the OKC plant yet. Is there any activity there anymore?

  23. #273

    Default Re: Canoo

    ^

    Based on every other EV manufacturer on the planet, they will *really* start to lose money once they actually start to build cars.

    They are in such a deep hole they can't afford to build the vehicles, take even bigger losses, then ride that out that for many years until they can hope to break even on anything they produce.

    This is why they keep stalling on car building and it's hard to imagine how that is ever going to change. Their only real hope is someone with deep pockets buys them out, but all that money is already committed to the big auto manufacturers and a handful of viable startups like Rivian. Why would you bet huge sums on Canoo?

    And BTW, every day they sit on their hands all the big boys are manufacturing, learning, growing, and improving. They were already far behind and now the gap is just widening every passing day. The Koreans in particular are kicking tail and parallel to all the EV improvements hybrid cars (esp. world-force Toyota) are making huge leaps that will bridge the long period between ICE dominance and EVs finally becoming the preferred platform, especially in North America.

    And oh yeah, the Chinese are already killing everyone in terms of EV value proposition.

  24. #274

    Default Re: Canoo

    Honestly disappointing, the design of the LV/LDV was starting to grow on me, and it would have been really cool to have some auto manufacturing back in the state - especially a homegrown option!

  25. Default Re: Canoo

    that last sentence by Pete is another story
    Oklahoma City, the RENAISSANCE CITY!

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