The 2024 Fisker Ocean Is Not Ready
fisker ocean
The Fisker Ocean Is Not ReadyFisker Inc.

We've always wished Henrik Fisker well. The Danish former Aston Martin and BMW designer seemed better suited to composing cars than the never-simple business of running a car company, much less a startup. Look no further than the ignoble crash and burn of his eponymous first effort, the Fisker Karma. A low and swoopy plug-in-hybrid sedan listing for more than $100,000 over a decade ago, it was poised to drain over $500 million from federal coffers and more than a billion dollars from private investors before it failed to sell in meaningful volume. This led stakeholders, including the feds, to bail and Fisker himself exiting shortly before the company he'd founded plunged into bankruptcy in 2013. A testament to the Karma's good looks, a close relative of that eye-catching first model lives on through the present day as the Karma Revero (nee GS-6), made by Chinese-owned Karma Automotive of Irvine, California. Predictably, its sales pace thus far remains relaxed. Very relaxed.

The good news is that—in a heartwarming testament to the indefatigable human spirit—Henrik Fisker is back with a new venture, Fisker Inc., and a new, all-electric Fisker, the Ocean SUV. Thanks in part to a 2020 SPAC offering that drafted the wild, Covid-era, upward spiral of Tesla shares, the reborn Fisker enterprise's value rocketed skyward out of the box, the company's worth pegged at almost $3 billion before even a single unit was sold. The launch made the designer cum auto magnate personally worth $1.6 billion in 2021, per Forbes. Not bad for a guy who'd sold but 2000 or so cars his last time out and whose new company had at the time yet to sell a single example of anything. However, as in his previous outing, disappointment waited around the next bend. The Ocean has been launched, single-digit-thousands of deliveries have now been made, three future models have been revealed. And yet, as I write, the new company's market cap has sunk to less than $550 million, with shares dropping more than 75 percent in the last year—down to $1.60 and below—from a one-time high of $19.28. More recent estimates place Fisker's personal net worth in the low, mere double-digit millionaire category.

fisker ocean
Fisker Inc.

Discouraging, but better than a poke in the eye with a sharp stick, all things considered. It's a brutalizing business. The stock market, like a dope fiend whose dealer skipped town, can't be trusted, and much was beyond Fisker's control. So hopes were high when, in my capacity as a juror for the World Car of the Year awards, I got a chance the other week to spend an unsupervised hour with a production Ocean in Southern California. Initially Fisker had said the Ocean would be built in the U.S. But with development and assembly subsequently assigned to Magna-Steyr—the venerable contract vehicle manufacturer with a plant in Graz, Austria, (and another in China) that has built more than 4 million cars, according to the firm, for many of the world's leading makers, including BMW, Mercedes, Chrysler, Jeep, Jaguar, and Toyota—at least a quality build was assured. Build of what was the question.