(Provides background in paragraphs 5-8, earnings preview in paragraph 9 and shares in paragraph 10)
Aug 3 (Reuters) – Electrical truck maker Nikola Corp mentioned on Thursday it had garnered sufficient help for a proposal to extend the variety of shares it might probably problem, opening the doorways to much-needed capital.
The corporate needed to adjourn its shareholder assembly twice as a result of it lacked sufficient votes, even because it urged shareholders for months to vote in favor of so-called Proposal 2, saying its means to proceed as a going concern can be “out of attain” with out the extra shares.
“This constructive consequence, significantly with respect to Proposal 2, was vital for continued development and success as we transfer ahead with our strategic priorities,” CEO Michael Lohscheller mentioned in an announcement.
The corporate didn’t present particulars of the voting.
Assist for the proposal comes as Nikola, like a lot of its EV friends, has been battling a money crunch, hampering manufacturing and forcing the corporate to chop prices.
To cut back money burn, Nikola introduced layoffs in June and liquidated property of a just lately acquired EV battery maker. It additionally determined to construct battery electrical vans solely to order and give attention to hydrogen gasoline cell vans.
However traders have been carefully scrutinizing money reserves at Nikola and different electric-vehicle makers anxious about extra share disposals to boost funds diluting their stakes.
Opposing the vote vocally was Nikola’s founder and prime shareholder Trevor Milton, who has additionally referred to as for a change in management. Milton stop Nikola in 2020 following claims of fraud by a Wall Road short-seller. He was later convicted of fraud over allegations he lied to traders about Nikola’s know-how.
Nikola is anticipated to point out a 15% decline in income and widening losses when it experiences second-quarter outcomes on Friday.
Shares of Nikola, which have soared almost 60% this yr to Thursday’s shut, fell 3.7% in after-hours buying and selling.
(Reporting by Abhirup Roy in San Francisco; Enhancing by Gerry Doyle and Lisa Shumaker)