Wheels Fall Off Fisker

The collapse of the startup auto company comes as falling gasoline prices have lessened demand for electric cars.

April 25, 2013

NEW YORK – Unless it receives a last-minute rescue, Fisker is “poised to become another DeLorean Motor Co. or Tucker Corp., a symbol of the difficulties of creating entirely new car companies,” writes the Wall Street Journal. But it also represents “one of the most prominent failures of the government's use of public funds to wean American industry from fossil fuels — and of how that government interest pushed Fisker to reach too far.”

At its peak, Fisker was one of the largest U.S. venture capital backed companies ever. Founders raised more than $1 billion from Silicon Valley venture funds and they recruited backers such as Al Gore and former Oracle Corp. president Ray Lane.

Fisker’s largest single investor, however, was the Obama administration. “In 2009, the Obama administration's interest in cultivating electric cars got the untested Fisker loans totaling $529 million, more than the company had initially requested, and an amount that encouraged private backers to chip in more funds. At one point, backers valued the company at $1.8 billion,” writes the Journal.

The newspaper brings light to how Fisker’s wheels fell off so quickly: “Fisker got its start in 2007, a year before U.S. gasoline prices hit $4.11 a gallon and seemed headed to $5 a gallon. The fuel spike and global cash crunch helped put General Motors and Chrysler Group in government-led bankruptcies. Its co-founder, Henrik Fisker, was a highly regarded designer for luxury brands Aston Martin and BMW and armed with an idea ripe for the times.”

Even with backing from the government and wealthy investors, Fisker had problems with suppliers and regulatory requirements, as well as software issues on display screens. Finally, in May 2011, the Obama administration, “under pressure from critics of its alternative energy spending and after the high-profile failure of U.S.-backed solar panel maker solar panel makerSolyndra LLC,” writes the newspaper, froze disbursements to Fisker.

Today, Fisker is headed for bankruptcy, and the U.S. could end up the owners of all or part of the company's assets “because its loans were backed by Fisker assets.”

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