The Outlook of Nio Stock Has Deteriorated

Aggressive investors who bought Nio (NYSE:NIO) stock in early October at its 52-week low were probably jumping for joy when the Chinese maker of electric vehicles announced higher-than-expected Q3 sales on Oct. 8. Nio stock price jumped by more than 11% on the news. 

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Nio’s management had previously expected to deliver between in the third quarter. It delivered 4,799 in the quarter, 35% higher than in Q3 and 47% above its  

It’s important to note that NIO hadn’t begun to produce or deliver the ES6, the company’s five-seat SUV, during last year’s Q3. only started in June 2019.

For Q3,  NIO reported 4,196 deliveries of ES6 vehicles and 603 deliveries of the ES8, its seven-seat vehicle. 

The good news is that the ES6 has been relatively well-received by Chinese consumers. The bad news is that doesn’t mean Nio stock has become a screaming buy. Here are a couple of reasons why that’s the case.

What Happened to the ES8?

Nio’s  ES8 deliveries tumbled  82% year-over-year and . That’s terrible news for the long-term owners of Nio stock because it means sales of the higher-priced ES8 are already tumbling a little over a year since NIO launched it. 

As a result of the decline, NIO is expected to in Q3 to 7,800. With Chinese subsidies for electric vehicles falling ( in 2018 to $1,600 in June), it’s unlikely that deliveries of the vehicle are going to jump anytime soon. 

“The China subsidy cut has been well understood by investors, so all China producers are looking at a weak 2H19,” Roth Capital analyst Craig Irwin said in September. 

In addition to the subsidy cut, the in June after reports of battery fires on the vehicles likely contributed to the huge drop in ES8 deliveries.  

That wouldn’t be a problem if monthly deliveries of the ES6 had kept increasing, but that wasn’t the case. NIO delivered , and suggesting that deliveries of the ES6 have topped out around 1,750 vehicles per month. 

Since the  ES6 costs approximately than the ES8, the company’s overall revenues are also likely not increasing. 

The Second Piece of Bad News for Nio Stock 

InvestorPlace contributor Mark Hake recently discussed the fact that NIO is functionally insolvent, with just $503 million of cash at the end of Q2 and burning about $500 million per quarter.

The only thing that’s going to save Nio from running out of cash is a financial lifeline from its founder and Tencent (OTCMKTS:TCEHY), the company’s largest outside shareholder. It’s also possible that the Chinese government could step in to save NIO from probable death. 

As Bloomberg reported in September, “it took Tesla (NATSLA) about 15 years to rack up . Nio, the company known as China’s Tesla, did it in four.” 

In June, I suggested that, given Nio’s negative gross margins — it loses money on every car it sells — and the fact that its is off-the-charts bad, investors should stay away from Nio stock.

Since then, I’ve softened my tone a little, suggesting that aggressive investors might consider NIO below $3.50. 

However, the trajectory that Nio is on suggests that it’s going to lose even more money in Q3.  

 I’m confident that aggressive investors ought to be able to find a better high-risk play than Nio. I wouldn’t buy Nio stock. 

At the time of this writing Will Ashworth did not hold a position in any of the aforementioned securities.

Will Ashworth has written about investments full-time since 2008. Publications where he’s appeared include InvestorPlace, The Motley Fool Canada, Investopedia, Kiplinger, and several others in both the U.S. and Canada. He particularly enjoys creating model portfolios that stand the test of time. He lives in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

 


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