

Critically, Beam held no debt on its balance sheet as of the end of the quarter and had an unused $100 million line of credit.īulls would be right to flag that Beam is primed for more growth with a balance sheet that can somewhat comfortably support further bolt-on acquisitions, fund the continued deployment of its EV ARC systems, and realize a $34 million sales backlog.

This end of period position was a jump from cash and equivalents of $1 million in the prior first quarter and came on the back of an oversubscribed June equity offering to raise $25 million. The Bittersweet Macro Backdropīeam's second-quarter cash flow from operations was negative at $4.4 million, an improvement from a loss of $5.5 million in the year-ago period with cash and equivalents as of the end of the period at $23.7 million. This outpaced the $2.8 million loss realized in the year-ago period. Gross profit during the second quarter of $501,000, around a 3% gross profit margin, was a huge improvement from a $326,000 loss in the year-ago period but came with a loss from operations of $3.54 million. It has also placed Beam liquidity in view. The acquisition is set to see revenue for Beam ramp to new highs with fiscal 2024 second-quarter revenue likely to be north of $40 million. Whilst no acquisition price was provided, Amiga is forecasting revenue for its second quarter, ending on the 30th of June 2023, to be between $15.5 million to $17 million. Further, Beam recently announced that it had signed a binding letter of intent to acquire Serbia-based Amiga, a specialized structures manufacturer that produces street lights, energy, and communications infrastructure.īeam Global Fiscal 2023 Second Quarter Form 10-Q Beam acquired the energy storage company back in February 2022 to diversify its revenue base, boost revenue growth, and enhance its broader position within the green economy. This growth was driven by a 589% increase in the deployment of the EV ARC charging system and a ramp-up of AllCell's battery production. Revenue Surgesīeam's fiscal 2023 second-quarter revenue at $17.82 million was growth of 379% over its year-ago quarter and a beat by $3.8 million on consensus estimates. A dovish Fed pivot and the eventual march of the Fed funds rate back to its pre-2021 average should help spark positive price returns for the San Diego-based EV charging company. Hence, even with the company's revenue surging over the last two years, its market cap is down markedly due to the current macroeconomic backdrop. To be clear, a dollar of revenue earned by Beam in early 2021 was valued at more than 75x but is now valued at less than 2x.

What does this all mean? That every dollar of revenue earned by Beam is being translated to an ever smaller amount of market cap gains. Critically, this great dip in sentiment has expressed itself as a pullback in the valuation of Beam with the EV charging upstart now swapping hands at a 1.94x price-to-sales multiple. This collapse of sentiment has come on the back of a Fed funds rate that currently sits at a 22-year high of 5.25% to 5.50% with expectations that there will be a further 25 basis points hike in 2023 building. Proterra and Lordstown Motors both filed Chapter 11 this year to shake investor confidence in a sector now seen as the future of transportation. Beam Global ( NASDAQ: BEEM ) has dipped nearly 40% over the last 1 year as 2023 has seen a range of electric vehicle bankruptcies. Whilst the Fed's hawkishness is needed to bring inflation back to its 2% target, it has had the unintended impact of shattering the EV dream as valuations and liquidity for tickers across the space collapse.
