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REE Automotive Holding Inc
NASDAQ:REE

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REE Automotive Holding Inc Logo
REE Automotive Holding Inc
NASDAQ:REE
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Price: 4.15 USD 1.22% Market Closed
Updated: Apr 29, 2024

Earnings Call Analysis

Q4-2023 Analysis
REE Automotive Holding Inc

REE Celebrates Milestones and Strategic Execution

REE Automotive had a transformative 2023, with their full by-wire technology advancing the electrification of commercial trucks significantly. Their order book spiked by over 900%, surpassing $50 million, and they commenced low-volume vehicle deliveries. Customer deliveries to their demo fleet are underway, with scale production slated for later in the year. Despite market conditions, they're postponing additional tooling investments until necessary working capital is secured, focusing on aligning order flow with production plans. REE closed the year with $86 million in liquidity and a 25% cut in cash burn. The planned cost reduction should continue, expecting another 25% decline in 2024. The production is expected to ramp up to low hundreds of trucks in the U.S. by the end of 2024, with a strategy focused on building only to order, not inventory.

Demonstrations Expected to Convert into Scale Orders

The company has initiated the delivery of vehicles in low volumes as part of the demo program and expects this to translate into scale orders from interested fleets. High-profile demonstrations to leading fleets such as Franz Bakery, Canteen, and the City of San Jose are on the agenda, with more vehicles already en route to customers.

California's Strong Influence and Incentive Programs

One-third of the $50 million order book is attributed to California, suggesting a diversified geographic demand within the U.S. The recent CARB (California Air Resources Board) certification provides a significant advantage, especially with more than $100,000 in incentives per truck now unlocked, covering over 70% of the truck's cost for customers.

Projected Production Cadence and Capacity Plans

Production is planned with a cautious approach, with an emphasis on completing the necessary working capital needs before fully scaling up. The company will continue to build REEcorners in the U.K. without over-investing, as they have plenty of capacity. Full-scale production of vehicles is expected to ramp up to low hundreds in the U.S. by the end of 2024, as tooling comes online and the contract manufacturer becomes operational.

Cost Reductions and Expense Projections

The company projects a year-over-year decrease of roughly 25% in its operational costs for 2024, continuing the trend established in 2023. Average monthly expenses are estimated at $5 million to $6 million, with higher spending anticipated in the first half of 2024 due to tooling and non-recurring engineering (NRE) expenses, followed by a substantial reduction in the latter half of the year.

Strategic Partnerships and Build-to-Order Model

Multiple partnerships are in place for charging solutions, including with Hitachi Power for large-scale, commercial-grade infrastructure. Additionally, collaboration with upfitters like Knapheide exemplifies the ease of integrating REE's design, with vehicle body marriages completed in under three days. The build-to-order strategy ensures customers have all necessary components ready, such as upfits and charging infrastructure, before the delivery of vehicles. This approach helps avoid inventory buildup and delivery postponements.

Earnings Call Transcript

Earnings Call Transcript
2023-Q4

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Operator

Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the REE Automotive Fourth Quarter 2023 Full Year Financial Results. [Operator Instructions] Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded.

I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Kamal Hamid, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

K
Kamal Hamid
executive

Thank you, operator, and thank you all for joining our fourth quarter 2023 conference call. We hope that you have seen our press release and shareholder letter issued earlier this morning at investors.ree.auto. If you haven't, I encourage you to review it as it has additional insights into the topics we will talk about on today's call. I would like to remind you that today's call may include forward-looking statements. Any statements describing our beliefs, goals, plans, strategies, expectations, projections, forecasts and assumptions are forward-looking statements. Please note that the company's actual results may be different from anticipated by such forward-looking statements for a variety of reasons, many of which are beyond our control, such as the ongoing military conflict in Israel. Please refer to the company's Form 20-F filed today, March 27, 2024, with the Securities and Exchange Commission, which identifies principal risks and uncertainties that could affect our business prospects and future results. We assume no obligation to publicly update any forward-looking statements, except as required by law. In addition, we will be discussing or providing certain non-GAAP financial measures today, including non-GAAP net loss and non-GAAP operating expenses. Please see our shareholder letter for a reconciliation of these non-GAAP measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures. I will now hand the call over to Daniel Barel, our CEO and Co-Founder.

D
Daniel Barel
executive

Thanks, Kamal, and thank you all for joining us today. 2023 was a pivotal year for REE. We achieved key milestones in line with our original time line and derisked our go-forward path, all while keeping true to our vision to expedite and solidify the electrification of commercial trucks through a white-label approach. I'm happy to report that much of the heavy lifting is behind us on the path to commercialization with a clean sheet design and unbound by legacy thinking.

Our full by-wire technology is mature. I'm proud to say that we have created the world's first FMVSS certified full by-wire electric vehicle, allowing us to advance the state-of-the-art in the medium-duty commercial vehicle space by orders of magnitude compared to other EVs and ICE offering. We continue to push the boundaries of our product testing vehicle dynamics and operations, having successfully conducted our second consecutive year of winter testing under extreme weather conditions.

We have also made significant progress on the business side. With the strong demand we see, our order book value grew by more than 900% year-over-year and now exceeds $50 million, and our dealer network continues to expand to 66 points of sales and service in the U.S. and Canada. With CARB certification and the U.S. EPA, our P7-C customers are eligible for federal and state incentives of over $100,000 per vehicle.

Our first vehicle was driven off the line and has been upfitted with Knapheide body and delivered to one of our largest commercial vehicle dealers in the country. With the first customer deliveries to our demo fleet completed and more underway, we plan to advance towards scale production later this year while remaining focused on our business plan and the P7 lineup.

Alongside our significant progress, we remain financially disciplined with a 25% year-over-year decrease in cash burn with tooling investment for the REEcorners deployed. We ended the year with $86 million in cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments, including a $15 million credit bank facility.

Confident in REE's bright future, our largest institutional shareholder, M&G, has led 2 successful capital raises for a total of $24 million alongside existing and new investors, and I thank them for their ongoing support and trust. With those behind us, we continue our effort to secure in advance the necessary working capital need for our first phase of production of low hundreds of trucks. As we remain disciplined and with current market conditions, we decided to temporarily postpone the remaining production tooling investment until we raise the additional required working capital for our production plan. We target completing the remaining tooling investment by midyear in order to scale up production in the U.S. as we build against committed orders and not for inventory. This strategy ensures we do not exceed our available capital by aligning orders flow with production plans for greater capital efficiency.

2023 was a pivotal year for REE because of what we have achieved and because we have accomplished it together despite many of us facing significant geopolitical instability. For that, I am so very proud of each of our great people at team REE. With that, we'll open up the call for questions. Operator?

Operator

[Operator Instructions] We will take our first question. And your first question comes from the line of Michael Shlisky from D.A. Davidson & Co.

M
Michael Shlisky
analyst

I wanted to ask first about the tooling investments. I guess, first, when you do get them, will they be the exact same tools you had before? And I just want to make sure that the folks who are selling you these tools, I guess there must be some kind of suppliers there, are you having any contractual changes to what you have to pay them or the payment schedule, if you change the dates, maybe put in the back of any kind of line of other people who need tools, et cetera. So I just want to make sure that when you are ready for it, you'll get them at the exact time that you need them still, even though you have to push back that date.

D
Daniel Barel
executive

Yes, sure. And of course, first and foremost, good morning. This is Daniel. Josh, why don't you start and I'll continue from there?

J
Josh Tech
executive

Okay. Michael, good to talk to you again. So yes, so to answer your question, we're still targeting to have our tooling in place by the fourth quarter. So what we're doing, we're progressing with our previously shared 2-phase manufacturing approach, and it's related to our investment, and so we're in the final stages to nominate the CM in the U.S., okay?

So the tooling for the corners has already been deployed. And then what we're doing, we're targeting to complete the remaining investment of approximately $10 million by the midyear, and this is in sync with our capital raising plan. So this will still allow us to scale production in U.S. with our contract manufacturer by the end of 2024.

D
Daniel Barel
executive

Does this answer your question?

M
Michael Shlisky
analyst

Well, so I just want to make sure there's confidence that you'll get the tools when you need them, even though you've changed the date. Have your suppliers indicated that they are ready when you are? Or are you -- okay, still that doesn't change?

J
Josh Tech
executive

Yes. We work naturally together with them. So no surprises.

M
Michael Shlisky
analyst

Okay. Perfect. Then I also want to touch on some of the results of some recent trade shows. We had the big Work Truck show. There's a couple of other more regional trade shows that have taken place in the last few months. I'd be curious of the large fleets that are out there and maybe there's half a dozen or a dozen of them that could take a P7 platform, just give us a sense as to how that went.

Did you come out of these shows with any major new orders? I know you have a higher backlog from necessarily from dealers in certain fleets, but did you get anybody new on the roster we should be thinking about here, any names, just curious do you have new levels you could add to, like a slide, if and when you're allowed to reveal who these customers are?

D
Daniel Barel
executive

Yes, those shows have been very successful for us. And we've seen very strong demand there and had a very, very busy booth and a lot of positive meetings. Regarding the fleet that you mentioned, we have seen strong interest from those -- from living fleets as well. And I think it's important to recognize the fact that the demo program is designed exactly to do that, to give those fleets the ability to try out those -- our vehicle, the P7 lineup and to allow them the confidence to nominate us as an approved supplier to them. So I think in short, the answer to your question, yes, we have come up with new opportunities for that show, very interesting discussion with many of the fleets and other dealers. And maybe I'll let Tali, Chief Business Officer, continue.

T
Tali Miller
executive

Yes. Good morning. So first of all, yes, a very strong demand and high interest. We also shared the growth in committed orders for the end of this year or quarter. So this translated into orders. But in addition to this, through the demo program, and we have initiated the delivery of vehicles in the low volumes.

We are going to see additional fleets that showed already interest in trying those demo units following the events they saw. And we expect this to convert into scale orders from those fleets. Specifically, we've demonstrated -- we are going to demonstrate the vehicles to multiple leading fleets to include, for example, Franz Bakery, Canteen, the City of San Jose and others.

M
Michael Shlisky
analyst

Okay. I'll leave it there, guys. All the best.

D
Daniel Barel
executive

Thank you.

Operator

We will take our next question. Your next question comes from the line of Jeff Osborne from TD Cowen.

J
Jeffrey Osborne
analyst

Daniel, I was just curious on the $50 million order book, that's great to see, how much of that is exposed to California? Can you give us a perspective there? Is it more than half?

D
Daniel Barel
executive

Good morning. That's a great question. I'm not sure I have the answer top of mind here, let me look into the numbers, but the majority of our orders is not linked to California to that aspect. We see demand across the U.S. But to your question, linking it to our recent CARB, California air bureau certification, I think that gives us a very strong tailwind in California in general, but also in the other states that support California or adopt the CARB certification, mainly around incentives, right? CARB recently that we announced unlocks more than $100,000 in incentives per truck for our customers. So our customers basically see now with CARB, more than 70% of the cost of the truck covered through both federal and state incentives. And I think this is great. We worked very hard to do so. And I think California is, of course, leading it. And as we said earlier, in earlier calls, having California dealers is and CARB is important for us. Tali, do you have numbers on how many...

T
Tali Miller
executive

Specifically from California, it's approximately 1/3.

J
Jeffrey Osborne
analyst

Got it. And then how should we think about -- you mentioned adding capacity in Texas as capital permits. How should we think about sort of the cadence of production? Is it a bit more maybe front-end loaded in the spring, 1Q, 2Q and then 3Q is a bit of a transitional quarter as you move from Coventry to Texas and then you would hit the ground running, so to speak, exiting 4Q and into 2025? I know you're not giving official guidance on how many units you expect to produce and sell. But just trying to understand the sort of slope of production through the year.

D
Daniel Barel
executive

No, that's really a great question. Josh?

J
Josh Tech
executive

Yes, I'll put some color. So maybe for this year, it's a little -- like I said, it's a little too early to answer the question of how many we'll deliver. But as we said in the shareholder, like the tooling and the investments for the REEcorners are being deployed, which we said we will continue to build those in the U.K. We don't want to over-invest and we don't need to.

So we have plenty of capacity there. And then we -- again, we'll bring the remaining tooling online for the rest of the vehicle and scale up the production up to low hundreds of the vehicles in the U.S. by the end '24. But again, the plan is linked to us completing the working capital needs, right? We're not going to spend too soon. So we want to make sure things are tied perfectly together.

D
Daniel Barel
executive

Yes. So basically, Jeff, we will continue delivering strategic quantities to our dealer to the demo program from the U.K. at full vehicles as we've started to do earlier this year, right, we already delivered a few trucks to customers this year, one of which people got to see in NTEA, Indianapolis, and others are on the way.

And the reason we're using that approach -- sorry, and then, of course, once tooling comes online and the contract manufacturer is up and running, we'll move to the U.S. for full assembly production and continue the production with the corners from the U.K. But the reason we're doing this and the reason for the demo program through the dealers is that our dealers provide us with a flywheel effect, right?

These dealers have a large geographic footprint and long-standing and charter relations with multiple fleets in their service area. Some of those relationships are decades old, right? And each vehicle we deliver will be demonstrated to multiple fleets.

Now we believe speaking to our dealers and to those fleets and others that this will result in follow-on scale orders. So the idea is that we want to start this process early or we have started this process early not waiting for the serial production to come online later in the year, and we will be producing strategic amount of vehicles out of the U.K. until that comes online.

J
Jeffrey Osborne
analyst

Makes sense. If I could squeeze in 2 quick ones here. Should we think about the quarterly expense rate, so not the CapEx, but the operating expenses, should that stay about the same as the current level throughout 2024? And then Daniel, if you could just make any brief comments on the readiness of your financing and charging partners that you've laid out to meet the demand exiting 2024 and into 2025?

D
Daniel Barel
executive

Yes. Maybe we'll start with the first financial bit. Yaron, you should take it.

Y
Yaron Zaltsman
executive

Yes, sure. Good morning. So I think going forward for year 2024 we should keep seeing actually decrease in our cost. What we are planning to do in year 2024 is to continue on the path that we started in year 2023, where it's including decreasing in our operational costs. In year 2023, we decreased our cost by roughly 25% compared to year 2022. And going forward, this process should continue also. And I think we'll also have another decrease of roughly 25% in our burn rate in year 2024.

J
Jeffrey Osborne
analyst

That's a burn with the CapEx and the OpEx combined.

Y
Yaron Zaltsman
executive

Yes, that is correct. That is correct. So I think roughly we're thinking about $5 million to $6 million per month in average. It will not be splitted on the same rate over the quarters. Because in H1, probably we'll spend more as we need to complete the tooling and NRE expenses. And then going to the second half of the year, it will go down dramatically.

J
Jeffrey Osborne
analyst

Got it. Any brief thoughts on the charging and financing partners you have, Daniel?

D
Daniel Barel
executive

Yes. So on the charging front, we're working with several charging partners, one of which is, of course, Hitachi, Hitachi Power, that have very interesting and very compelling offering of large-scale, commercial-grade charging infrastructure. I think recently, they've announced something around that with Penske, which is interesting to look at. And we work with others because some are asking for other solutions, more local solutions.

And also on the upfit, it's super important, right? I mean, we showed how we work with Knapheide. And of course, you'll see other upfitters that we work with. Knapheide was very happy, of course, with the process, mentioning that we're able to complete the marriage of the chassis and the body within less than 3 days, which is a record for them, because of the ease of design for REE.

The one thing may be important to know here, Jeff, is we build to order, we don't build for inventory. Therefore, we make sure that when we start building for a customer, we make sure that they have the upfit ready, the infrastructure, the chargers ready, everything ready to receive the vehicle.

And I think this is key for us because we're not building for inventory, and therefore, we don't get stuck with inventory or with postponed pickups. We deliver only to order. And we make sure that for all of our partners, they have everything they need in advance of us delivering the trucks, so the truck arrives complete and directly goes into service. And we will continue to be very prudent on that approach.

Operator

[Operator Instructions] We will take our next question. Your next question comes from the line of Craig Irwin from ROTH MKM.

C
Craig Irwin
analyst

Can you please talk about the order book? I should say, congratulations on the continued strengths there, building that out. What is the approximate sort of head count, the number of individual dealers and fleets that have placed orders with you? And if you could maybe talk about how this could potentially be delivered? Do we have a couple of units upfront from one of the fleets followed by follow-on orders? And how much of that, I guess, would be sort of first unit versus follow-on, I guess, is the question.

D
Daniel Barel
executive

Yes. Good morning. Good early morning. So for your first question, we currently have -- we see strong demand for our by REE and for our technology, for the by-wire, and our current dealer network now covers 66 points of sales and service, I think one of the largest for EVs in the country.

And we do this through 20 dealers, both in the U.S. and Canada. And that gives us a very broad footprint across the whole U.S. and parts of Canada. And I think what we see in the commercial market in terms of demand is interesting because it's different than passenger demand and how you deploy passenger vehicles in that segment. Maybe Tali, you can add more color on that.

T
Tali Miller
executive

Yes, sure. Good morning. And thank you for this question. It's a strong question. So first to add on Daniel's point, the importance of having the 66 service points allows fleets to receive service across U.S. and Canada, which is what fleets are looking for, and this was -- this is very important for us to achieve.

Second, we see with respect to the demand, unlike I think what we see in the slowdown of the demand on the passenger EV, we do see a continuous and actually growing demand in the mid-duty Class 3 to 5 EV space that -- this is the space we currently serve. We believe this demand is driven by several reasons -- for several reasons.

Of course, the mandate and very strong incentives, both federal and state, they are very strong. The zero emission goals are very important for fleet. And of course, the TCO advantages of electric vehicles versus ICE vehicles.

And moreover, I would say that from a charging infrastructure perspective, which might be a complex one on the passenger vehicle, the space we are at, the midsize duty and also the feedback of the fleets we work with, actually, the cycle, the driving cycle is short. So basically, the driver would start in the morning and at the end of the day and charge at the depot. So from the charging infrastructure is easier for them to be served.

D
Daniel Barel
executive

And to your last point, yes, I think your approach to how to roll out the fleet is correct. We are starting to ramp up later on the year. And then we will start providing a few trucks to every fleet and then ramping it up through 2025 when we ramp up towards the low to mid thousands of vehicles in production.

I think it's very, very important to deploy a few to run the demo program, receive the voice of the customer, which we are very attuned to and listen to any changes on modification they still want, although we've been developing those vehicles together with them for a long time.

So this is why you see the high level of satisfaction there, but we always remain attuned to the voice of the customer. So we would like to explore as many fleets as possible to our vehicles in the coming months, providing them with vehicles and then ramping them up towards 2025.

C
Craig Irwin
analyst

Understood. So Daniel, we had an opportunity recently to meet with your -- the customer that took your first commercial delivery of a commercial vehicle here in the U.S. And they are obviously very big supporters. And actually, we got to tour the vehicle with them, too. So it seemed to generate quite a lot of excitement.

Can you maybe share with us what you're learning from these early deliveries? What are customers saying? Is this maybe shifting your understanding of what the priorities are for investment and purchase decisions on the part of customers out there? What are you learning from these early deliveries?

D
Daniel Barel
executive

Yes. It's a great point because, as you mentioned, we had the chance to talk to a customer, to a very large customer. And I think it's key to hear from them. And I think what we're learning from the first deployment is, first and foremost, that we get an overwhelmingly positive feedback for the design, for the spaciousness and the agronomic advantage of our cabin, of the low floor, the very driver-centric cabin that we offer and the performance of the truck.

That's one. Second, a lot of the fleets like our ability to work with multiple upfitters and to offer multiple applications for different use cases due to our modularity approach and low flat floor.

Another point that they all mentioned is the data we have to back the offering, for example, the extensive winter tests that we just concluded for the second year in a row. So for example, we don't have to guess what is the range in extreme conditions, like minus 30 degrees, and what is the performance, which is good, just saying.

And I think all of that, the ability to provide data behind our trucks and to showcase the offering, and that leads to our customers being able to calculate their future going TCO expectations, and it makes them easier -- make the transition towards electrification easier for them.

Last but not least, of course, charges are -- is very important. And as previously asked, we're working closely with charging partners to ensure that they have the adequate infrastructure to support the trucks.

C
Craig Irwin
analyst

Excellent. And last question, if I may, is actually a pretty basic question. FMVSS, the Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard certifications, is this a gating factor that is necessary for commercial deliveries? How long did it take you to achieve FMVSS with your certification partner?

If someone was to start today, is it logical for them to take a similar amount of time with a different technology or a competing technology? If you could help investors understand a little bit better the significance of FMVSS and how this is such a big accomplishment.

D
Daniel Barel
executive

Yes, of course. I mean it is a huge accomplishment. First and foremost, because we were the first -- we still are the only one in the world to be able to certify and put on the road a fully by-wire vehicle. There are some vehicles out there that are partially by-wire, mainly steer-by-wire, like the Tesla Cybertruck, right?

And we see more and more OEMs trying to adopt more and more by-wire technology slowly because it's a very heavy lifting to do by-wire, especially when you do a full by-wire, therefore, redundancies and control and stability and maturity of the software is critical. So definitely, we see more and more players out there like Tesla, like Lexus and others that offer partially by-wire system mainly around steering, but we are the only one that have been able to do a full by-wire vehicle.

And it took us years, years of testing and validating the technology. And it's not just the hardware mainly, as I'm sure people understand, it's mainly around software and running algorithm and AI and others to ensure that we have all the abilities and the machine learning needed to run in real time our by-wire capabilities with all the redundancies.

And as you fairly mentioned, one, we decided to take it to the market, it is -- you can't put a vehicle in the U.S. without FMVSS cert and EPA by the way, but the FMVSS cert is a critical one. And we decided to go and pursue this with a third party that helped us to ensure the validation process correctly and run those tests in a manner that is as perfect as possible, right, because being the first one, we believe that it is critical to ensure a very high level of performance.

Should anybody else try to do it? I mean I'm not sure that the phrase should, I mean, everybody should. And I think they are all trying. But I think currently, with FMVSS, we opened a gap in sort of magnitude with everybody else in the industry, being able to do that.

And keep in mind that as more of our trucks are on the road, the more data we collect from our by-wire system, and that allows us to improve it even further. And one should assume that everybody now saw the first version of our corners and our by-wire technology. But we've been working on by-wire for 10 years now. So one should assume there is far more coming in the future.

C
Craig Irwin
analyst

Excellent. I'll take the rest of my questions offline. Congratulations on the progress.

D
Daniel Barel
executive

Thank you so much.

Operator

There seems to be no further questions. I would like to hand back to Daniel Barel for closing remarks.

D
Daniel Barel
executive

So I want to thank everybody for taking the time and joining us today. I want to thank our investors for their strong, great support. And I want to say thank you again for everybody on team REE for a phenomenal year, overcoming so many challenges and driving strong results. Thank you, everybody, and stay safe.

Operator

This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.

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