Unlike what the title would suggest, the “moving to Texas” part was basically immaterial to the company’s failure.
They never had any product to ship to begin with and were basically subsisting on loans and venture capital money to continue bullshitting with a theoretical product. Add in some dodgy regulatory practices resulting in fines from the Government and questionable business practices. When the funding dried up, they withered like a sponge in the California (or Texas) sun.
Fuck Texas
My takeaway as well! Canoo can go eat a dick, but Texas can go eat a huge dick
I am confused: why should Texas be rewarded with dick-meat? Should they not rather eat excrement?
perhaps the move to a human-hostile environment such as texas cost them some good employees.
The entire point of my comment was to indicate that this had seemingly little to no impact on the company’s success. Even the best employees in the world can’t save a company that is shipping no product and run by idiots.
The person already said it wasn’t because of that, no need to “perhaps” by disregarding the effort they went to.
Me thinks the United States economy has a small valuation problem.
The stock market isn’t the economy, but yes, I generally agree, everything tech is overvalued.
No one said it was and it’s not even remotely exclusive to tech.
You said the economy has a valuation problem. That doesn’t make sense, since the economy is about jobs and trade, not about valuations. The stock market (including public and private markets) is about valuations.
Valuation allows for borrowing. If a company can determine it’s worth to a potential lender by using it’s valuation, which we agree is under the markets domain, then they are now hand in hand. If you can borrow against valuation they cannot be exclusive.
Sure, and that’s a stock market issue (broadly speaking), not an economic one. Someone losing their shirt for investing stupidly is not indicative of an economic failure, but of a valuation failure.
Valuation problems can lead to economic problems if it’s widespread enough, such as with the .com or RE market collapses, but they can also be pretty isolated and have minimal impact. Intel’s valuation, for example, has been cut to almost a third (not by a third, but to a third), and that hasn’t triggered or indicated much of anything in the economy, it’s just Intel failing over and over to live up to their valuation. Yeah, jobs get cut (economic indicator) when there’s a huge discrepancy w/ valuation, but they also tend to get created at other orgs as they snap up the business left behind by the failing company.
The economy and the market are certainly related and linked, but they’re not the same thing. An economic collapse usually causes or is caused by a market collapse and vice versa, but not always, especially if it’s isolated to a sector like we see with AI. If everyone completely 180s on AI, it’s not going to change the jobs landscape much, but it will cause a lot of valuation corrections throughout the tech industry. Companies like Microsoft and Nvidia will be fine since they have other core businesses, but companies like OpenAI won’t be nearly as resilient since that’s their entire business. Likewise, financial companies investing in AI companies will also likely be fine, provided they have a sufficiently diversified portfolio.
Writing was on the wall after they lost their Amazon and USPS bids. Their entire model was based on landing fleet contracts.
I was hoping their truck or lifestyle vehicle would make it to market, but yeah they had a steep hill to climb with all the turmoil surrounding the company, scaling production, and the change in political winds now being essentially hostile to EV manufacturers.
In August, Canoo moved its headquarters from Torrance, Calif., to Justin, Texas — asking 137 of the office’s 194 employees to relocate, while cutting the remaining staff.
Moving wasn’t going to save the company so why uproot your employees only to fold 5 months later
It was probably part of a cost cutting plan too show they were trimming costs in order to get more funding from investors. It clearly didn’t work.
I wonder if Texas has better bankruptcy laws.
Filing for bankruptcy in Delaware where they were incorporated
political winds now being essentially hostile to EV manufacturers.
Wonder what musk’s got to say about that. Or are the winds hostile against tesla’s competition only?
Does anyone else only remember their dream if they’re lucid dreaming, but for some reason, it immediately wakes you up when you realize you’re lucid dreaming?
Edit: WRONG POST
Reality check!