Nikola Needs Votes. Stock Drops as Meeting Adjourned to Garner Support.

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Wall Street doesn’t project positive free cash flow for Nikola until 2027.


Krisztian Bocsi/Bloomberg

Sometimes people can be funny.

Nikola

(ticker: NKLA) announced, on Wednesday, it was adjourning its annual shareholder meeting and would reconvene it in July.

The start-up, which makes trucks powered by battery and hydrogen fuel cells, needs time to marshal more support from shareholders for “Proposal 2,” a key item in the annual proxy statement that will allow

Nikola

to issue more shares—a necessary precursor to raising more capital. Why shareholders are reluctant to vote, or are voting no, is hard to figure out. The proposal is designed to help the company.

“Without additional shares, our ability to raise the capital we need to further our mission will be out of reach,” said CEO Michael Lohscheller in a May video to shareholders. “Not voting on Proposal 2 is the same as against the proposal.”

In the first quarter Nikola produced 63 battery-electric trucks, delivering 31 to dealers. Retail sales came in at 33 units.

Nikola will need more capital eventually to build its business. Nikola ended the first quarter with about $200 million in cash on its books and access to about $800 million in capital, including its cash balances. Wall Street expects the company to use about $150 million a quarter and doesn’t project positive free cash flow until 2027.

Most of the time, issuing more shares isn’t an issue for any company. Bumping up against a cap tied to a company’s bylaws is a little unusual. What’s more, the actual number of shares a company has isn’t usually a thing investors worry about. The number is just an accounting placeholder. Nikola has about 720 million shares outstanding. That isn’t the number investors care about. They care about the roughly $410 million market capitalization, which is the number of shares times the 59 cents stock price.

To be sure, shareholders seem to see the wisdom in approving Proposal 2. Nikola says a majority of the 77% shares voted so far are in favor of it. But all the yea votes in the 77% don’t amount to 50% of the total shares outstanding. So Nikola needs to solicit the other 23%, pushing for yes votes.

Uncertainty around Proposal 2 adds some uncertainty for Nikola investors. Shares were down 1 cent, or about 1.4% in premarket trading Thursday, while


S&P 500

and


Nasdaq Composite

futures were up about 0.1%.

The impact on the company in the long run should be small. The share count issue should work itself out over time, although there is no guarantee. Nikola investors have other things to worry about.

Through Wednesday trading, shares are down about 91% over the past 12 months. Rising interest rates and dwindling cash balances have sapped investor enthusiasm for shares of many start-ups.

Nikola shares had a great day Wednesday, up 9.5%. That is only a nickel, though. Shares are trading at 59 cents and the value created Wednesday amounts to roughly $36 million.

There wasn’t much news on which to pin gains. Nikola presented at a

J.P. Morgan

investor conference on Wednesday. That might have been part of the reason, but shares have been volatile lately.

Write to Al Root at [email protected]

Source: https://www.barrons.com/articles/nikola-stock-shareholder-vote-capital-ev-8f2b1d3c?siteid=yhoof2&yptr=yahoo