June 6 (Reuters) – Electric vehicle startup Fisker (FSR.N) has signed a deal to sell emission credits to a major automaker, looking to enter a market it is betting on to navigate a stormy economic environment and a price war sparked by Tesla (TSLA.O).
The announcement on Tuesday comes barely a month after Fisker lowered its 2023 production target and reported a worse-than-feared adjusted loss in the first quarter.
It did not reveal the company it had sold the credits to.
Many electric-vehicle makers, including market leader Tesla, have been selling credits earned for exceeding emission and fuel economy standards to other automakers that fall short. This has created a lucrative revenue stream for cash-strapped startups.
EV firms are also battling a slowdown in demand as inflation and sky-high interest rates sap consumers’ purchasing power; Tesla’s strategy of cutting prices to increase volumes has also hurt their ambitions.
Fisker, whose shares closed up 1.4% at $5.84, will also start U.S. deliveries of the all-electric Fisker Ocean SUV later this month, it said.
Reporting by Niket Nishant in Bengaluru; Editing by Pooja Desai
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