Can Workhorse Finally Overdeliver (Or Is It Just Too Late For The EV Maker)?

 | Jun 01, 2022 20:30

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

Workhorse Group (NASDAQ:WKHS) was early to the electric-vehicle revolution. However, execution has been so poor that 16 years after its founding as AMP Electric Vehicles, the manufacturer of zero-emission commercial vehicles is running out of time.

To be fair, new management has addressed the company's problems head-on. The strategy now seems coherent and the outlook from the company is far more reasonable. There is still a chance that Workhorse finally delivers on some of its potential.

But a chance is not a guarantee—and the path forward for Workhorse continues to be fraught with risk. Management still has a lot of work left to do, and, importantly, not a lot of cash left with which to do it.

How We Got Here/h2

The original business model for Workhorse was to convert internal combustion engine ICE passenger vehicles to electric powertrains. In 2013, thanks to roadblocks (no pun intended) to that model, the company pivoted to the design of electric delivery vans. Workhorse even received a stroke of luck when Navistar—which is now part of Munich based, Traton (ETR:8TRA), which manufactures commercial vehicles—chose to sell its Workforce subsidiary that manufactured chassis and its factory in Indiana.

Workhorse set to work building its flagship C-1000 van. It promised 2,000 deliveries in 2018 but got nowhere near that target; total sales to date are less than 500 units, and the C-1000 now is being discontinued.

Famously, it also aimed to win a multi-billion contract from the United States Postal Service (USPS). Short sellers warned that the company simply didn't have the capability to supply the needed vehicles. Eventually, the USPS agreed, awarding the contract to Oshkosh (NYSE:OSK), pummeling Workhorse stock in the process.

Along the way, management talked up Workhorse's HorseFly drone system as well. That, too, went nowhere.

Incredibly, Workhorse posted negative revenue in 2021, due to the returns of the C-1000 (all of which were recalled). But the company only generated $1.3 million in sales the year before.

To be blunt, this is a company that has done nothing successfully but raise capital. With WKHS stock around $3, its ability to do even that is in question.