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NIO Q4 2023: Weakened Earnings, Ambitious Goals

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Models produced by Chinese carmaker NIO Inc (ticker: NIO) are neither the cheapest nor the most expensive ones on offer in China’s crowded automobile market; the addressable market can roughly be described as being the “middle-to-upper” income segment. Despite high technical watermarks, there are a number of other competitors that cater to this segment. Furthermore, this segment is arguably the most vulnerable to the economic headwinds China is beginning to feel (as described in an article published in December1).

Its latest earnings release is stated to have missed analysts’ expectations; however, this isn’t likely to significantly impact on the stock’s valuations since they have already been in a gentle decline over the past year. Why they were deemed to be missing expectations, despite some very good top-of-the-line metrics, is worthy of examination.

Trend Studies

In general trends, it can be seen that the company tends to run on very thin margins.

Source: Company Financials, Leverage Shares analysis

While the impact of cost of sales on total revenue did have some encouraging downtrends through 2020 and 2021, this has steadily trended upwards since to consume nearly all of revenue earned. The company’s revenues used to be almost entirely driven by the sales of cars. In the past year, revenues from “other” sources – namely the sale of accessories and power solutions, resale of used cars, sale of power piles, etc. have shown some encouraging increases. The growth of “other” sales is indicative of a strong sense of user retention. Overall, total operating expenses are paring down to somewhere around the 45-50% share of total revenue. While the company has never shown positive net incomes, gross profits have been positive since 2020. In the past year, its share within total revenues is at 4-year lows.

In first-order (i.e. “Year-On-Year” or YoY) terms, however, there are a number of encouraging trends.

Source: Company Financials, Leverage Shares analysis

While the company’s trends in number of vehicles delivered is paring off from the massive upticks seen in 2020 through 2021, there have been no downturns. In Fiscal Year (FY) 2023, the company delivered a little over 160,000 vehicles and offers guidance that Q1 2024 sales will be 31,000-33,000 vehicles. Considering that 10,055 vehicles were delivered in January this year and 8,132 in February, this implies that the company hopes to deliver somewhere around 12,000-15,000 vehicles in March. Given the ongoing crush on household expenditures and the downtrend seen in February, this is a rather interesting assertion.

Despite gross profit being positive over the past few years, first-order trends indicate that this is under some pressure which the company explains (at least in this past year) as primarily being due to the decrease in gross margin from the provision of power solutions as a result of an expanded power network across China. The company also states that it has begun to attract a relatively higher vehicle margin (11.9%) which isn’t altogether surprising; NIO’s models generally aren’t known to be deficient in quality.

Perhaps the most interesting trend to be seen are those in net income and Earnings Per ADS (American Depositary Share): over the past two years, the former has shown a fairly strong uptrend while the latter has had a pretty strong uptrend for the past three years. While earnings per ADS have been 36% lower than in the previous year at a loss of $1.75, it is a far cry from the loss of $10.21 in 2018. Overall, this impact on the bottom line is a par for the course for the company: it is known to aggressively push for greater automation and other forms of production floor upgrades, as well as substantial R&D effort. It is entirely likely that the earnings breakeven which was expected to happen in 2024 would be deferred by at least a year.

Going over vehicle sales, et al relative to vehicles delivered for that year might not be wholly meaningful for any given year since most buyers of higher-end vehicles typically wait a period of time to collect their orders after making payment. Nonetheless, overall trends are rather telling. The ratio of vehicles sales to vehicles delivered has substantially flattened from a little over $62,000 per delivery in 2018 to around $43,000 (i.e. roughly the price of an ET5, the cheapest model) in 2023, thus suggesting that buyer expectations are largely set and a relative “size of the market” is largely determinable by the company. This is also borne out by strong trends in “other sales” relative to the volume of vehicles sold. The relative downtrends in gross profit and the rising increase in net losses also suggests an increasingly-clear addressable segment, which implies that the company’s battle with other carmakers (such as BYD) catering to that same segment.

Performance Comparison: Stock vs ADS

As described in the recent Baidu earnings article2 as well as others over the years, it isn’t entirely possible for most global investors to own an interest via stock ownership; instead the “American Depositary Share” (ADS) format followed by most Chinese companies traded in American bourses act as a form of a promissory note that offers a defined portion of the profits of the company instead.

NIO’s ADS has always been equivalent to one Chinese share. There are a number of differences in market player participation, as exemplified in performance logged over the past one year.

Source: Leverage Shares

Overall, the ADS tends to be slightly better than the Chinese share in terms of performance: from 2023 through the 5th of March this year, the ADS declined 43% while the share declined 47%. This is at least partly explainable trends in volumes: traded volumes of the ADS tend to be anywhere from 5 to 322 times that of the Chinese shares’ volumes. In 2024, the ADS’ daily volumes are 34 times that of the Chinese shares on average.

In Conclusion

The company isn’t exactly content with staying within its best-addressable segment: in its annual user gathering “NIO Day” this past December, the company unveiled the ET9 electric executive flagship in Xi’an, China.

NIO Founder William Li Unveiling the ET9 at NIO Day 2023. Source: NIO

Touted to have over 100 NIO full-stack technologies3 – including 17 world-firsts and 52 leading advancements such as the Adam 2.0 super computing platform and China’s first Full-Domain 900V Architecture which enables 600kW peak charging power and a 255 kilometer range extension in just 5 minutes – this model (with deliveries expected in 2025) will be the company’s attempt to cash in delivering a luxury brand experience coupled with peak performance to unlock inroads into a more recession-proof user segment.

The company’s technical achievements have been also been garnering attention from other quarters in some interesting ways. After picking up an aggregated 7% stake4 in NIO in June, the Abu Dhabi government’s investment fund CYVN Holdings injected another $2.2 billion to bring its stake in the company up to 20% in December. On February 26, a subsidiary of NIO Inc., entered into a technology license agreement with CYVN subsidiary Forseven that grants the latter access to the company’s “existing and future technical information, technical solutions, software and intellectual property rights”. It is entirely possible that this transaction was enacted to propel an EV project that will be indigenous to the United Arab Emirates, a federation of seven emirates.

While the company might not be currently profitable, that doesn’t necessarily mean the company isn’t successful. However, there are a plethora of other stocks that don’t have negative earnings trends that will likely be preferred by many investors over the company’s. There might be a number of opportunities later on in the year to buy the dip for long-term growth investors. In particular, price volatility can be expected after March sales numbers are released as well as other periods of the year.


Footnotes:

  1. “China’s Economy: In Recession?”, Leverage Shares, 22 December 2023
  2. “Baidu Q4: Why Earnings Missed Expectations”, Leverage Shares, 1 March 2024
  3. “NIO Day 2023 Unveils Tech-Packed ET9 Flagship Sedan”, The EV Report, 26 December 2023
  4. “Abu Dhabi Fund’s $1 Billion Stake In EV Maker NIO Highlights Growing Arab-China Ties”, Forbes, 24 June 2023

Your capital is at risk if you invest. You could lose all your investment. Please see the full risk warning here.

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Violeta Todorova

Senior Research

Violeta è entrata a far parte di Leverage Shares nel settembre 2022. È responsabile dello svolgimento di analisi tecniche e ricerche macroeconomiche ed azionarie, fornendo pregiate informazioni per aiutare a definire le strategie di investimento per i clienti.

Prima di cominciare con LS, Violeta ha lavorato presso diverse società di investimento di alto profilo in Australia, come Tollhurst e Morgans Financial, dove ha trascorso gli ultimi 12 anni della sua carriera.

Violeta è un tecnico di mercato certificato dall’Australian Technical Analysts Association e ha conseguito un diploma post-laurea in finanza applicata e investimenti presso Kaplan Professional (FINSIA), Australia, dove è stata docente per diversi anni.

Julian Manoilov

Marketing Lead

Julian è entrato a far parte di Leverage Shares nel 2018 come parte della prima espansione della società in Europa orientale. È responsabile della progettazione di strategie di marketing e della promozione della notorietà del marchio.

Oktay Kavrak

Head of Communications and Strategy

Oktay è entrato a far parte di Leverage Shares alla fine del 2019. È responsabile della crescita aziendale, mantenendo relazioni chiave e sviluppando attività di vendita nei mercati di lingua inglese.

È entrato in LS da UniCredit, dove è stato responsabile delle relazioni aziendali per le multinazionali. La sua precedente esperienza è in finanza aziendale e amministrazione di fondi in società come IBM Bulgaria e DeGiro / FundShare.

Oktay ha conseguito una laurea in Finanza e contabilità ed un certificato post-laurea in Imprenditoria presso il Babson College. Ha ottenuto anche la certificazione CFA.

Sandeep Rao

Research
Sandeep è entrato a far parte di Leverage Shares nel settembre 2020. È responsabile della ricerca sulle linee di prodotto esistenti e nuove, su asset class e strategie, con particolare riguardo all’analisi degli eventi attuali ed i loro sviluppi. Sandeep ha una lunga esperienza nei mercati finanziari. Iniziata in un hedge fund di Chicago come ingegnere finanziario, la sua carriera è proseguita in numerose società ed organizzazioni, nel corso di 8 anni – da Barclays (Capital’s Prime Services Division) al più recente Index Research Team di Nasdaq. Sandeep detiene un M.S. in Finanza ed un MBA all’Illinois Institute of Technology di Chicago.

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