China Daily (Hong Kong)

Electric car startup Nio gets over 10b yuan credit line from Chinese banks

“Our deliveries in the second quarter of 2020 exceeded the high end of our earlier projection, and we are confident that our goals on gross margin and operationa­l efficiency will be achieved.” Steven Feng, chief financial officer of Nio

- By LI FUSHENG

Nio Inc has secured credit lines worth 10.4 billion yuan ($1.48 billion) from six Chinese banks, which is expected to further consolidat­e the financial fitness of the leading Chinese electric car startup.

According to the deal signed on Friday, the lenders including Bank of China and China Constructi­on Bank will provide the funds to Nio China, which is owned by Nio and located in Hefei, capital of East China’s Anhui province.

“Nio China will work with the banks extensivel­y in corporate account system building, supply chain financing and auto financing to other business,” Nio said in a statement on Friday.

The deal came less than three months after Nio announced its partnershi­p with a group of Stateowned investors from Hefei to set up a joint venture called Nio China.

The investors are devoting 7 billion yuan in cash for a 24.1 percent equity, and Nio is injecting its core businesses and assets valued at 17.77 billion yuan and 4.26 billion yuan in cash for a controllin­g 75.9 percent stake in the joint venture.

The deal “resolves near-term liquidity concerns around Nio,” Robin Zhu, an analyst at Sanford

C. Bernstein, told Bloomberg after the deal was reached in April.

“Investors can now go back to analyzing the demand and cashflow picture,” said Zhu.

Like all electric car startups, Nio had been hindered by lack of funding until its decision to partner with Hefei investors.

Nio lost about $1.6 billion in 2019 and had $151.7 million in cash, equivalent­s and short-term investment­s left at the end of the year.

For a while, the New York-listed company worried that it may not have enough cash to survive another 12 months.

Before its deal with Hefei investors, the company had raised at least $435 million through shortterm convertibl­es.

Founded in 2014, Nio has been producing vehicles in Hefei in partnershi­p with State-owned Anhui Jianghuai Automobile Group Holdings Ltd.

Like its financial conditions, its sales are turning for the better as well. Nio delivered 10,331 vehicles in the second quarter of 2020, up 190.8 percent year-over-year.

As of June 30, 2020, the startup’s cumulative deliveries reached 46,082 vehicles, 14,169 of which were delivered in 2020.

“Our deliveries in the second quarter of 2020 exceeded the high end of our earlier projection, and we are confident that our goals on gross margin and operationa­l efficiency will be achieved,” said Nio’s Chief Financial Officer Steven Feng.

The carmaker said gross margin improvemen­t is one of its top objectives in 2020.

Last year, its gross margin was negative 15.3 percent, with net loss standing at $1.62 billion.

In a March earnings call, Nio said the gross margin will turn positive in the second quarter and reach two digits by the end of the year, as it is optimizing the supply chain, negotiatin­g better deals and reducing manufactur­ing costs by ramping up production.

 ?? LI FUSHENG / CHINA DAILY ?? Visitors read informatio­n about the ES6 SUV at Nio’s booth at the Shanghai auto show in 2019.
LI FUSHENG / CHINA DAILY Visitors read informatio­n about the ES6 SUV at Nio’s booth at the Shanghai auto show in 2019.

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