'Nevada treasurer raises questions about Faraday Future'

http://www.seattletimes.com/business/chinese-billionaires-plan-to-make-electric-cars-runs-into-vegas-problem/
Chinese tycoon’s electric-car plant hits speed bump in Vegas
July 5, 2016   Bloomberg News

[image  / Mark Schiefelbein/AP
http://static.seattletimes.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/0394a95e-4303-11e6-baf5-3c1e1b76058b-780x520.jpg
Visitors see the Faraday Future concept car at a Beijing show in April.
Faraday, owned by a Chinese billionaire, wants to build a Nevada auto plant
but needs state support for new roads, water and power lines
]

Chinese tech entrepreneur Jia Yueting, whose Faraday Future wants to build a
$1 billion auto plant in North Las Vegas, has failed to win the confidence
of one key man: Dan Schwartz, Nevada’s treasurer, who must sign off on
government support for infrastructure.

Jia Yueting has all the trappings of a successful Chinese tech entrepreneur
with global ambitions.

The self-made billionaire got his start as the IT guy at his local tax
bureau. Now Jia’s flagship internet-video company sports a $15 billion
market capitalization and a buy rating from Goldman Sachs Group.

Donning hoodies and T-shirts, he boasts of plans to take on Apple in
smartphones and surpass Tesla Motors in electric cars. Jia’s Faraday Future
has lured staff from Ferrari and BMW, and won the backing of Nevada’s
governor to construct a $1 billion auto plant in North Las Vegas — about 400
miles from where Tesla broke ground on a giant battery factory in 2014.

Yet for all Jia’s accomplishments, the 43-year-old tycoon has failed to win
the confidence of one key man. Dan Schwartz, Nevada’s treasurer, says he’s
skeptical Jia can secure financing for the car plant, a project that needs
government support for power lines, water mains and roads.

Schwartz, the former CEO of a private-equity research firm in Hong Kong,
wants more transparency on the funding before signing off on state bonds for
$120 million of infrastructure improvements.

The crux of Schwartz’s concern is Jia’s reliance on equity-backed loans, a
financing strategy that could leave Nevada taxpayers vulnerable to the whims
of China’s volatile stock market. Jia has pledged 87 percent of his holdings
in Leshi Internet Information & Technology — his flagship firm — for cash he
then plowed back into his companies, regulatory filings show.

The stock, whose trading was halted in Shenzhen for the first five months of
2016, has dropped 11 percent since it resumed trading June 3, a move that
heightens Schwartz’s fear that a margin call could prevent Jia from funding
the plant.

“You can see where this leads,” Schwartz said. “His Internet company is
successful, but that doesn’t generate the billions of dollars he’d need.
Where’s he going to get the money?’’

The financing questions surrounding Jia’s foray into the U.S. electric-car
market are becoming more common around the world as China Inc. embarks on an
unprecedented overseas shopping spree. Chinese firms, which boosted outbound
direct investment by 62 percent in January-May from a year earlier, are
branching out even as rising debt levels and weak profits at home cast doubt
over their ability to secure stable funding.

Faraday, whose 1,000-horsepower concept car has drawn comparisons to the
Batmobile, says it has the full support of Nevada’s governor and is pushing
forward with the city of North Las Vegas on infrastructure planning.

The 800-employee carmaker — a separate company from Leshi that’s
majority-owned by Jia — has sought to address Schwartz’s concerns but could
“technically” build the plant without the state bonds, Faraday spokeswoman
Stacy Morris said in an emailed reply to questions.

Jia has invested more than $300 million of his own money into Faraday, and
the firm will announce a round of outside funding within weeks, said Winston
Cheng, a former Bank of America investment banker who now runs corporate
finance for Jia’s companies. He said the size of the funding would be
“meaningful” and come from Asian investors, while declining to provide more
details.

“I don’t understand why he’s trying to kill these high-end jobs in the state
of California and Nevada,” Cheng said, referring to Schwartz. “It baffles
me.”

City, county and regional government agencies are already working with
Faraday on infrastructure for the plant, and the Nevada Governor’s Office of
Economic Development has approved funding for worker training.

Leshi, the publicly traded centerpiece of Jia’s empire, shows few signs of
financial distress. Profits increased 20 percent in the first quarter, while
its quick ratio, a gauge of the firm’s ability to meet obligations over the
coming year, is in line with the median for Chinese companies as a whole,
according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Analysts also are bullish on the stock. Nine of 11 forecasters tracked by
Bloomberg give it the equivalent of a buy rating.

Investors are less sanguine, though, with Leshi shares sinking for six
straight days after they resumed trading last month. At 105 times projected
earnings for this year, the stock is more than twice as expensive as the
median China-listed company. And the firm has recorded negative cash flow
for the past two quarters, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

“It’s a matter of time before problems emerge,” said Wang Zheng, the
Shanghai-based chief investment officer at Jingxi Investment Management,
which oversees about $300 million and is avoiding Leshi shares, in part
because of concerns over its financing strategy.

The company’s high valuation reflects the appeal of “concept” stocks among
Chinese individual investors, Wang said.

Jia and his family have pledged about $5 billion of Leshi shares as
collateral for loans, amounting to a 35 percent stake, according to data
compiled from the company’s first-quarter report. Jia also sold 2.5 billion
yuan ($375 million) of Leshi shares in June 2015 and lent the proceeds back
to Leshi to “relieve the company’s financing pressure.”

He later entered into a contract with an asset-management firm to exchange
100 million shares, or about 5.3 percent of the company, for cash he then
lent to Leshi interest-free. Jia pledged to repurchase the stake after Leshi
repays the money.

“The company is capital strapped,” said Dai Ming, a money manager at
Hengsheng Asset Management in Shanghai.


For Schwartz, Jia and Faraday Future need to explain more clearly how they
plan to provide stable financing for the Nevada project.

Only then would he consider supporting a state debt sale to fund the plant’s
infrastructure.


He said it’s his role as treasurer to bring the bond before the state’s
board of finance, whose chairman is the governor, for approval.

Schwartz, an elected member of the Republican Party who took office in
January 2015, dismissed the notion that his opposition to the Faraday
project has anything to do with his political ambitions. He has clashed with
the Republican governor before on budgetary issues, amid speculation he
could mount his own bid for governor.

“I may/may not run for governor, but this project has nothing to do with my
political future,” Schwartz said in an email. “It’s strictly about whether
Faraday has the money/expertise to build a $1 billion electric-car
manufacturing facility in North Las Vegas. And, if they don’t, whether or
not I want the Nevada taxpayer to pick up the tab.”
[© 2016 The Seattle Times  seattletimes.com]
...
http://www.autoblog.com/2016/07/10/faraday-future-questions-nevada-treasurer/
Nevada treasurer raises questions about Faraday Future
Jul 10th 2016
...
http://uncyclopedia.wikia.com/wiki/Las_Vegas
 ... To many locals, the city is affectionately known as "Lost Wages" ...
http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Lost%20Wages




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