The Manila Times

EV MAKER VINFAST POSTS $2-B NET LOSS

- AFP

HANOI: Vietnamese electric vehicle (EV) maker VinFast on Thursday reported a net loss of more than $2 billion in 2023 after missing its sales target, despite a 90-percent increase in revenue.

The communist state’s first homegrown car manufactur­er is trying to crack the internatio­nal market, aiming to compete with global EV giants such as Tesla.

VinFast said in a filing submitted to the US Securities and Exchange Commission that its total revenue in 2023 was $1.19 billion, up 91 percent compared to the previous year.

But the firm also reported a net loss of $2.39 billion, up 14.7 percent compared to 2022, after missing its EVs sales target.

“We saw favorable results in our business operations in the fourth quarter with strong revenue growth and improved profit margins,” Anh Nguyen, VinFast chief financial officer, said in a statement.

“We remain focused on enhancing investment performanc­e and strengthen­ing our balance sheet by reducing production and materials costs.”

A total of 34,855 VinFast EVs were delivered in 2023, accounting for $1.09 billion and up 111 percent from the previous year but that figure was short of VinFast’s 50,000 target.

The filing said that VinFast’s gross loss was $551.6 million last year, with $174.9 million in the fourth quarter.

However, its revenue between October and December reached $436 million, a 26-percent rise compared to the previous quarter.

The firm said it would raise its delivery target to 100,000 vehicles in 2024 and focus on penetratin­g other internatio­nal markets beside the United States, Canada and Europe.

VinFast announced on Wednesday that it will begin building an EV factory in India’s southern state of Tamil Nadu on February 25, with capacity to produce 150,000 vehicles a year.

The firm also plans to invest at least $1.2 billion in Indonesia, where it plans to establish an EV factory, and has expressed intention to invest in the Philippine­s.

VinFast listed on the Nasdaq in August, hitting headlines around the world as its valuation skyrockete­d and then crashed.

The company’s chief executive officer is Pham Nhat Vuong, Vietnam’s richest man and chairman of VinFast’s parent company Vingroup.

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