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Archer Aviation “wants to fly you from Manhattan to JFK for USD150,” starting in 2025.

A lead­ing finan­cial web­site is an unusu­al place for an inter­view with an eVTOL com­pa­ny, but Archer is attract­ing atten­tion with its strong and con­sis­tent news flow, its share price has risen 110 per­cent dur­ing the last six months, and per­haps why, Mot­ley Fool has jumped on-board for an inter­view. 

Mean­while, Archer is one of Cathie Wood’s favourite present stocks. The infa­mous Wall Street trad­er “of dis­rup­tor com­pa­nies” added in August a fur­ther 4.4 mil­lion shares to her ARK Invest ETFs, cre­at­ing a cur­rent worth of USD120 mil­lion. That’s 0.92 per­cent of the over­all equi­ty port­fo­lio (25th largest hold­ing). The investor owns 10.36 per­cent of out­stand­ing Archer Avi­a­tion stock. The first trade was made in Q3 2021. Since then Wood has bought Archer shares three more times and sold some on five occa­sions.

The Fool’s Jour­nal­ist, Rich Smith, asks the ques­tions. Archer CEO, Adam Gold­stein, answers them.

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What advan­tages does eVTOL air­craft have over ground and heli­copter trans­porta­tion?

As of 2023, 56% of the world’s pop­u­la­tion lives in cities today accord­ing to the World Bank, with their pro­jec­tion being that it will rise to near­ly 7 of 10 peo­ple by 2050. Traf­fic delays alone cost the U.S. econ­o­my over $120 bil­lion per year. One key to solv­ing this prob­lem is unlock­ing the skies for every­day inter­ci­ty trav­el.

The biggest advan­tage to trav­el­ing in the skies ver­sus via the ground is that you can fly over traf­fic. A taxi from the East Side of Man­hat­tan to Newark Lib­er­ty Inter­na­tion­al air­port can take 90 min­utes or more. Our eVTOL air­craft can make that same trip in approx­i­mate­ly 10 min­utes. Heli­copters can’t do that at scale because of the noise they gen­er­ate, safe­ty con­cerns, and high cost.

Our Mid­night eVTOL air­craft take-off and land like a heli­copter but fly for­ward like a tra­di­tion­al air­plane. Spin­ning 12 small pro­pellers rather than one large rotor lets us spin them at low­er tip speeds, with noise lev­els almost 100 times qui­eter than a heli­copter. And with 12 pro­pellers for mul­ti­ple redun­dan­cy, they’re designed to be far safer than heli­copters.

In the future, what might pas­sen­ger fares for a 10-mile trip via Mid­night be ver­sus taxi fare?

Today, you can take a 20-mile Uber Black from Man­hat­tan to JFK air­port for about $150. That trip is only 7 miles by air, and we aim to fly it for a price that is com­pet­i­tive with Uber Black.

That sounds great. Now add the advan­tage in trav­el time. Is the long-term vision that eVTOL will replace ground trans­port?

Our goal is to make eVTOL flight an every­day option for urban trav­ellers. Our air­craft will com­ple­ment over­bur­dened ground trans­porta­tion net­works, not replace them.

(Cred­it: Archer)

What are Archer’s advan­tages over your com­peti­tors?

First, often, com­pa­nies design their prod­uct and then look for a use case. We designed our air­craft for a spe­cif­ic use case, the 20 to 50 mile trip that takes an hour or more by car. Every­thing about the air­craft is opti­mised for this trip. As an exam­ple, we opti­mised our pow­er­train to be able to charge in about 10 min­utes between suc­ces­sive trips.

Sec­ond, we designed our air­craft along­side the Fed­er­al Avi­a­tion Admin­is­tra­tion, which we believe has allowed us to advance our air­craft through the FAA cer­ti­fi­ca­tion process. We did not devel­op a design and take it to the FAA to cer­ti­fy, as there, poten­tial­ly, would have been feed­back that required us to redesign our air­craft.

Final­ly, it’s near­ly impos­si­ble to cer­ti­fy an air­craft with less than $1 bil­lion of cap­i­tal. Archer is one of only a few eVTOL com­pa­nies to hit that mark.

Sketch out the time line for going from eVTOL con­cept to eVTOLs rou­tine­ly fly­ing city to city.

Our time­line has four parts: tech­nol­o­gy devel­op­ment, FAA cer­ti­fi­ca­tion, man­u­fac­tur­ing and com­mer­cial­i­sa­tion.

On tech­nol­o­gy devel­op­ment, we’ve val­i­dat­ed our core design through exten­sive flight test­ing of our air­craft, and we’ve trans­lat­ed that learn­ing to our cer­ti­fi­ca­tion, man­u­fac­tur­ing, and com­mer­cial­i­sa­tion efforts.

Cer­ti­fi­ca­tion requires sig­nif­i­cant co-oper­a­tion with the FAA. We are one of only two com­pa­nies with Air­wor­thi­ness Cri­te­ria for their eVTOL air­craft pub­lished in the Fed­er­al Reg­is­ter by the FAA. We’ve been work­ing close­ly with the FAA on the remain­ing steps to achieve Type Cer­ti­fi­ca­tion, and expect to begin for-cred­it flight test­ing in 2024 with our goal to begin com­mer­cial oper­a­tions in 2025.

On man­u­fac­tur­ing, we want to build air­craft at scale. We’ve part­nered with automak­er Stel­lan­tis to build a high-vol­ume facil­i­ty in Geor­gia. Ini­tial capac­i­ty will be up to 650 air­craft per year, which can ramp to over 2,000 per year with a phase 2 build out.

Final­ly, on com­mer­cial­i­sa­tion, Unit­ed Air­lines has agreed to buy up to 300 of our Mid­night air­craft, and our plan is to col­lab­o­rate with them on our first air taxi routes in the U.S. Advanc­ing all of these work streams is intend­ed to set us up to achieve com­mer­cial­i­sa­tion in 2025 and scale by 2028.

How long after cer­ti­fi­ca­tion should investors expect to see rev­enue from the “Archer UAM” air taxi busi­ness?

The goal is for our UAM busi­ness to begin gen­er­at­ing rev­enue in 2025 but remains depen­dent on us receiv­ing Type Cer­ti­fi­ca­tion of our air­craft from the FAA.

Unit­ed Air­lines has agreed to buy any­where from $1 bil­lion to $1.5 bil­lion worth of eVTOLs from you. How many air­craft would that be?

As dis­cussed pre­vi­ous­ly, Unit­ed Air­lines has agreed to buy up to 300 of our Mid­night air­craft, and our plan is to col­lab­o­rate with them on our first air taxi routes in the U.S. They’ve already paid a $10 mil­lion pre-deliv­ery pay­ment for the first 100 air­craft.

Archer burned more than $200 mil­lion in cash last year. You expect “sig­nif­i­cant expens­es and con­tin­u­ing loss­es for the fore­see­able future.” How safe is this stock for indi­vid­ual investors?

We believe we have a once-in-a-gen­er­a­tion oppor­tu­ni­ty to be one of the first com­pa­nies to mean­ing­ful­ly deploy a trans­for­ma­tion­al tech­nol­o­gy that will for­ev­er change how peo­ple move in and around cities around the world. Mor­gan Stan­ley pre­dicts urban air mobil­i­ty to be a $66 bil­lion mar­ket by 2035, and a $1 tril­lion mar­ket by 2040. Indi­vid­ual investors must decide what risk they are will­ing to take with any invest­ment, but we agree with Mor­gan Stan­ley that the oppor­tu­ni­ty in this indus­try is mas­sive and our focus is on deliv­er­ing on our mis­sion of mak­ing urban air mobil­i­ty and cre­at­ing val­ue for our share­hold­ers.

CEO Car­los Tavares at your part­ner Stel­lan­tis advo­cates “cross-indus­try col­lab­o­ra­tion” between car com­pa­nies and eVTOL. Can you elab­o­rate?

eVTOL air­craft are only pos­si­ble because of advance­ments in high-den­si­ty lithi­um-ion bat­ter­ies by elec­tric vehi­cle mak­ers such as Stel­lan­tis and Tes­la. This tech­nol­o­gy direct­ly ben­e­fits urban air mobil­i­ty, and we’re build­ing on that foun­da­tion.

For eVTOL air­craft to be suc­cess­ful they must also be man­u­fac­tured at scale — more like cars than like air­planes. His­tor­i­cal­ly, air­craft OEMs have assem­bled vehi­cles almost entire­ly by hand. A sin­gle air­plane can take over 90 days to man­u­fac­ture. Automak­ers are typ­i­cal­ly more heav­i­ly auto­mat­ed, and so we’ve part­nered with Stel­lan­tis to build a man­u­fac­tur­ing facil­i­ty in Geor­gia that can even­tu­al­ly pro­duce more than 2,000 air­craft per year.

(Cred­it: Archer)

In 1943, IBM pres­i­dent Thomas Wat­son pre­dict­ed “there is a world mar­ket for maybe five com­put­ers.” Elec­tric air taxis sound wild today, but in 70 years, will pri­vate own­er­ship of eVTOLs be as com­mon as own­ing a PC today? 

When we look at the mar­ket for eVTOL air­craft, we’re con­fi­dent that it will be larg­er than any­thing we can pre­dict today. This has the poten­tial to be the first major change to how peo­ple trav­el since the mass adop­tion of com­mer­cial flight.

Replac­ing a large por­tion of the heli­copter mar­ket is our first oppor­tu­ni­ty. We esti­mate that it would take us near­ly a decade to cap­ture only a third of the glob­al com­mer­cial heli­copter mar­ket, and that does­n’t count the tens of thou­sands of expen­sive and cum­ber­some mil­i­tary heli­copters that eVTOL air­craft could replace.

Beyond heli­copters, eVTOL air­craft low noise pro­file opens key air­port trans­fer and com­muter routes in most major met­ro­pol­i­tan cities that peo­ple cur­rent­ly tran­sit by car.

Ulti­mate­ly, we believe we can unlock leisure routes and latent demand that today remains com­plete­ly unful­filled. For exam­ple, Mid­night can take you from down­town Los Ange­les to the beach in approx­i­mate­ly 5 min­utes, mak­ing it eas­i­er and faster to see your friend in San­ta Mon­i­ca more often than you do today.

For more infor­ma­tion

https://www.archer.com

(News Source: www.fool.co.uk)

(Top image: Adam Gold­stein)

eVTOL Insights is part of the Industry Insights Group. Registered in the UK. Company No: 14395769