Two Top ELMS Execs Resign Over Questionable Equity Stakes
The sudden shakeup at Electric Last Mile Solutions follows an investigative report into executive actions at the electric van maker that also determined its financial statements should be revised.
ELMS, a maker of electric last mile delivery vans, is evaluating the accounting and treatment of certain equity issuances to executive officers and is pursuing a revision of its financial statements, now deemed unreliable.
Photo: ELMS
3 min to read
Electric Last Mile Solutions, Inc. CEO and co-founder James Taylor and Executive Chairman of the Board Jason Luo resigned their positions Feb. 1 as an internal probe determined they were among executives who purchased equity in the company at substantial discounts to market value without obtaining an independent valuation, according to a company press release.
Taylor purchased equity in these transactions while Luo participated in these and other transactions and directly or indirectly purchased and sold equity in such transactions, the investigation determined.
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On Nov. 25, 2021, the company’s board formed an independent special committee to examine certain sales of equity securities made by and to individuals associated with the company; the legal, disclosure and tax consequences of those transactions; and other issues that arose in connection those sales. The committee’s investigation found that the transactions occurred in November and December 2020, shortly before the company’s Dec.10, 2020 announcement of a definitive agreement for a business combination with Forum Merger III Corporation that eventually led to ELMS being publicly traded on the NASDAQ exchange.
ELMS CEO and co-founder James Taylor, who resigned his company positions on Feb. 1, 2022.
Photo: ELMS
In addition, on Jan. 26, 2022, on the basis of the special committee investigation, the board concluded that the ELMS' previously issued consolidated financial statements should be restated and, therefore, should no longer be relied upon. The financial statements in question cover the period as of Dec. 31, 2020, the period from Aug. 20, 2020 (inception) through Dec. 31, 2020, the six months ended June 30, and the nine months ended Sept. 30, 2021.
In connection with this conclusion, ELMS, together with its advisors, is evaluating the accounting and treatment of certain equity issuances to executive officers, the company stated in its release. Although the company cannot, at this time, estimate when it will file its restated financial statements for such periods, it is plans to complete the restatement, including an evaluation of the company’s financial statement reserves for tax payments and contingencies.
The Company expects to report on a preliminary, unaudited basis that it had about $132 million to 142 million in cash and cash equivalents, which includes $25 to 30 million in restricted cash, as of Dec. 31, 2021.
As of Friday, Feb. 4, ELMS shares were trading at $2.26, down 67% from $6.93 a share on Jan. 1. Year over year, the shares are down 82% from $12.50 per share on Feb. 4, 2021.
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Replacing Taylor and Luo are Shauna McIntyre, a member of the ELMS Board of Directors, who has been appointed as Interim CEO and President, and Brian Krzanich, who has been appointed Non-Executive Chairman of the Board. Taylor and Luo have also resigned their board positions and will maintain consulting roles with the company to help ensure that ELMS delivers on its development and sales pipelines.
McIntyre most recently served as President of Ouster Automotive, following over 25 years working with automotive OEMs. Previously, she served as CEO of Sense Photonics, Inc., a 3D vision company building high-performance, mass manufacturable LiDAR solutions for next-generation transportation needs. Prior to that, she led Google's automotive services program, where she supported the release of certain Google products, including Google Maps, into automakers' new vehicle models. During her earlier years at Google she served as Chief of Staff for Google's consumer electronics division, which combines the best of Google AI, software, and hardware. McIntyre earlier led the U.S. New Mobility Practice for management consulting firm, Egon Zehnder, and was VP of Honeywell's Commercial Vehicle Turbocharger platform. She began her career at Ford, where she automated manufacturing plants overseas and led final assembly production, and later joined McKinsey & Company as a management consultant. Since 2019, she has served on the Board of Directors of Lithia Motors, one of the largest providers of personal transportation solutions in the U.S.
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