'Dubuc is aiming for wealthy customers who want a flashy, fast car'

http://business.financialpost.com/entrepreneur/fp-startups/how-quebecs-dubuc-motors-is-using-u-s-equity-crowdfunding-to-bring-you-a-flashy-fast-electric-car?__lsa=8d21-c2eb
How Quebec’s Dubuc Motors is using U.S. equity crowdfunding to bring you a
flashy, fast electric car
January 22, 2016  Damon van der Linde

[video  flash


images  
http://wpmedia.business.financialpost.com/2016/01/mario_dubuc-_co-founder_of_dubuc_motor.jpg?w=620&quality=60&strip=all&h=465
Mario Dubuc is the co-Founder of Dubuc Motor, who will be the first EV
company in history to launch its electric supercar, the Tomahawk, through an
equity crowdfunding platform  / Francis Vachon for National Post

http://wpmedia.business.financialpost.com/2016/01/dubuc.jpg?w=620&quality=60&strip=all&h=465
Dubuc Motors believes this is a demand not currently being met  / Handout/
Dubuc Motors
]

MONTREAL — For a region that has never had an automotive manufacturing
sector and where winters are too harsh for most sports cars, Quebec
City-based Dubuc Motors says it was surprisingly easy to find local sources
for almost all the parts it needed to build a high-performance electric
vehicle.

How equity crowdfunding works

StartEngine, and other online platforms like it, facilitates the U.S. JOBS
(Jumpstart Our Business Startup) Act, which allows private companies to
connect with investors for the funds they need.

Sometimes described as helping a company do a “mini IPO,” StartEngine begins
by sourcing public interest in the company for anywhere between 90 and 120
days. During that time, those who want to invest put in a non-binding
reservation.

If there is enough interest, the company sets a price per share and those
with a reservation are first in line to buy shares, while StartEngine
charges a fee on transactions. 

After the offering, the shares are traded not on the stock market, but on
exchanges set up through platforms like StartEngine. 

The difference between equity crowdfunding and other crowdfunding platforms
is that while Kickstarter and Indiegogo source donations in exchange for
rewards or perks, the JOBS Act allows companies to raise capital by actually
selling shares. 

And, while investors can come from anywhere in the world, this is a U.S.
government initiative for U.S. startups and companies from only one other
country are allowed to participate in the program — Canada.

This type of fundraising wasn’t always possible. The U.S. Security Exchange
Commission only approved equity crowdfunding for Title 4 — so-called
Regulation A+ — companies like Dubuc Motors in March 2015.

Qualified companies are then able to raise up to US$50 million a year, which
is a far cry from the maximum $1.5 million in equity crowdfunding also
approved last year in several Canadian provinces, including Quebec.

So far, only one company has completed a Reg A+ equity crowdfunding
campaign: another vehicle maker called Elio Motors, which had US$47 million
in reservations and ultimately sold US$16 million in equity to build a
three-wheeled gas-powered car.

Right now Dubuc Motors has begun the both exciting and nerve-racking stage
where it is sourcing interest from potential investors. 

“(Raising that much money) requires that it’s a big vision and it has to
have some meaningful beneficial impact on the world,” says Ron Miller, CEO
of StartEngine. “By bringing this company into existence, we’re going to do
something to make the world better.”

What has really proven difficult for the company is sourcing Canadian
investors to help take its Tomahawk electric sports car from a prototype to
the consumer market.

After years spent seeking financing close to home, Dubuc Motors is looking
south, becoming the first electric vehicle company in the world to launch a
car through the U.S.’s very new equity crowdfunding program.

“Nobody wanted to invest in cars in Quebec,” said cofounder and company
chief executive Mario Dubuc. “We wanted to prove that our technology was
different and we could make it.”

On Friday Dubuc Motors began their campaign to raise money through
StartEngine, one of a handful of online platforms that facilitates the U.S.
JOBS (Jumpstart Our Business Startup) Act, which allows private companies to
connect with investors for the funds they need. 

Dubuc and business partner Mike Kakogiannakis met in Moncton, N.B., where
Dubuc’s wife ran a chip wagon near Kakogiannakis’ wife’s ice cream parlour.
The two bonded over their mutual love of cars and, although neither had
formal experience with the automotive industry, in 2004 began designing the
Tomahawk electric sports car part time.

Kakogiannakis, 33, says he believes Tesla Motors Inc. “paved the way” for
the electric car market in North America and gave the industry a credibility
it needed.

The Tomahawk looks like a hybrid between a Dodge Viper and a Tesla Model S,
with a hint of Lamborghini. It can go from 0 to 60 km/h in three seconds and
has a top speed of more than 250 km/h — higher than those in the Tesla line.
It also has a bonded aluminium chassis invented by the Dubuc Motors team,
something Kakogiannakis saiys he was inspired to create after he took up
flying planes. 

Four years ago the entrepreneurs made the leap to work full time on the car.

Every component of the Tomahawk is sourced from within 45 minutes of the
company’s Quebec City facility, Kakogiannakis says, except the windshield,
battery and tires. 

What was difficult locally, was finding either government support or
investors willing to put up capital for the company.

Dubuc says for two years the company tried to find funding in Quebec and
elsewhere in Canada.

“All the time it was ‘no’ and closed doors. When I started everybody thought
that I was a fool because nobody was making cars in Quebec,” Dubuc says.

“The reason it took (us) 12 years is, I believe, that society wasn’t ready,”
Kakogiannakis says “In 2004 when we were talking about this, people looked
at us very strangely.” 

Still, Tesla’s brushes with bankruptcy have drawn unfavourable comparisons
when Dubuc Motors approached venture capital firms, making it difficult to
secure funding.

“They don’t seem to think about how (Tesla) was the first one on the planet
to come out with an electric car, the hurdles they had to go through and the
naysayers along the way,” says Kakogiannakis, who is also Dubuc Motors’
chief operating officer.

He says at first he worried the company was doing something wrong in the way
it sought financing, before learning that even Tesla CEO Elon Musk was
unable to secure venture capital in the early stages. 

“I realized that he laid it on the line himself, while he had a lot more
capital and stature than we did. If he didn’t find (VC funding), what were
the chances that we would?”

So far, the company has spent more than a million dollars developing the
Tomahawk, sourced entirely through Kakogiannakis and Dubuc’s personal
resources, in addition to some “love money” along the way. 

“My paycheque for the past three years has been zero,” says 51-year-old
Dubuc, who began working on cars out of personal interest at 14. “I didn’t
want to be 70 years old and regret that I didn’t do this.”

That drive led Dubuc Motors to StartEngine, which is helping the company
take advantage of the JOBS Act, a process sometimes described as being like
a “mini IPO.” 

Kakogiannakis says the target is to raise $15 million for a minority stake
in the company, somewhere around 10 per cent, though the final amount would
depend on how investors react to the initial campaign. 

Because the Tomahawk is designed to be the only “2+2”-seat (built for the
driver and one passenger in the front plus two smaller seats in the rear)
electric sports car, Dubuc Motors believes this is a demand not currently
being met.

Kakogiannakis says although Tesla’s current line of cars may look sporty,
the target market is not the same as those who would be in the market for a
high-performance roadster.  

“We wanted to develop a product that wouldn’t compete with the big
automakers. If we were to do that we would get hammered,” he said. “What
we’re trying to do is complete Tesla’s line, not compete with it.”

This car is not for everyone in either the electric or combustion engine
realm, as Dubuc Motors is aiming for wealthy customers who want a flashy,
fast car.

The Tomahawk is expected to be ready for market in 2017 with a price tag of
about $110,000, which is not cheap but is still in the realm of the cost for
a new Tesla. 

Right now, Dubuc Motors has about a dozen employees, but Kakogiannakis says
after this capital-raising campaign it hopes to expand to 140 by the time
production begins in 2017.

The company goal is to sell 1,500 units a year, starting with 200 in 2017,
and it has already started taking pre-orders from as far away as Asia,
Europe and South Africa. 

Although there is a long way to go before production reaches this stage,
Dubuc says the potential of seeing his lifelong dream materialize after more
than a decade of dedication makes it hard to contain his enthusiasm.  

“I’m very excited about it, but I want to stay focused and see what will
happen,” he said.

“It’s like playing with a slot machine and winning the jackpot, but not
being able to take it right now.”
[© financialpost.com]
...
http://dubucmotors.com
Dubuc Motors
...
[dated]
http://www.gizmag.com/tomahawk-supercar-kit-electric-gas/31144/
Tomahawk super kit-car supports a trio of powertrains
MARCH 10, 2014  ANGUS MACKENZIE
...
http://www.digitaltrends.com/cars/dubuc-motors-tomahawk-sports-car-canadas-first-homegrown-electric/
DUBUC MOTORS’ TOMAHAWK SPORTS CAR IS CANADA’S FIRST HOMEGROWN ELECTRIC
December 5, 2014  Andrew Hard
...
http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/template/NamlServlet.jtp?macro=search_page&node=413529&query=Dubuc+Tomahawk&days=0&sort=date
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