Tucked inside Canoo’s 2023 earnings report is a nugget concerning using CEO Tony Aquila’s personal jet — simply one in all many bills that illustrates the hole between spending and income on the EV startup.
Canoo posted Monday its fourth-quarter and full-year earnings for 2023 in a regulatory submitting that exhibits an organization burning by way of money because it tries to scale up quantity manufacturing of its industrial electrical autos and keep away from the identical destiny as different EV startups, like lately bankrupt Arrival. The regulatory submitting as soon as once more contained a “going concern” warning — which has endured since 2022 — in addition to some progress on the bills and income fronts.
The corporate generated $886,000 in income in 2023 in comparison with zero {dollars} in 2022, as the corporate delivered 22 autos to entities like NASA and the state of Oklahoma. And it did scale back its loss from operations by almost half, from $506 million in 2022 to $267 million in 2023. The revenue-to-losses hole remains to be appreciable although: The corporate reported complete web losses of $302.6 million in 2023.
Nonetheless, one solely wants to take a look at what Canoo is paying to hire the CEO’s personal jet to place these “wins” into perspective. Underneath a deal reached in November 2020, Canoo reimburses Aquila Household Ventures, an entity owned by the CEO, to be used of an plane. In 2023, Canoo spent $1.7 million on this reimbursement — that’s double the quantity of income it generated. Canoo paid Aquila Household Ventures $1.3 million in 2022 and $1.8 million in 2021 to be used of the plane.
Individually, Canoo additionally paid Aquila Household Ventures $1.7 million in 2023, $1.1 million in 2022 and $500,000 in 2021 for shared companies help in its Justin, Texas, company workplace facility, in keeping with regulatory filings.
This could possibly be chalked as much as small financial potatoes if Canoo reaches its income forecast for 2024 of $50 million to $100 million.
We’ve requested Canoo for remark and can replace this publish if we hear again.