Stuart Simpson
Analyst · Raymond James. Your line is open
Hi, good morning and good afternoon to everyone in Europe. Thank you very much for joining the call. As you can see from the video, we've been making significant progress at Vertical over the year and in particular the last few months. As you know, we relaunched the company on a call in November during which we shared details of Flightpath 2030, our strategy to lead the sector by the end of the decade. During the call, we laid out clear financial and operating goals through 2030 and beyond. We remain the only company in the sector with a set of transparent, stretching, challenging, but ultimately deliverable metrics. Building on that call today, this is our first formal earnings call and going forward we will do these on a regular basis and supplement them with update and progress calls. Now, turning to the agenda today. I'll cover our recent progress and why I'm so convinced Vertical will be one of the winners in the sector. I'm joined this morning by Si Davies, our Chief Test Pilot, who will then explain our approach to and progress with our flight test campaign and how this sets us apart from the rest of the sector. Then I will conclude with a short review of our financial position and our outlook for 2025. Over the past months we've seen the industry reach an inflection point driven by physics, where the wing tilt rotor is proving to be the winning design and funding, where we've seen significant investment into the sector. However, the real measure of success is the cost through to certification. Within this context I want to touch on three key points. Our technical progress and route certification, our best-in-class aircraft and our focused business model. The first point of why we are positioned to win is the technical progress we've made to date. We decided early to fly a full scale prototype and to progress piloted flight tests as soon as possible. Si will be sharing more on why this is so important to us at Vertical. But in short, there are negligible learnings to be made from flying a subscale multi-rotor winged aircraft. So we've been making incredible progress with our current full scale piloted prototype. We're one of only two eVTOL companies in the world to have achieved piloted thrust borne flight. That’s why the rotors provide both lift and thrust. We are targeting piloted wing borne flight in the coming three to six months, and Si is going to explain the significance of this shortly. All of this incredible progress flying piloted is underpinned by our proprietary battery, where we’ve completed millions of hours and hundreds of years of combined testing as we refine the product and drive towards certification. We have initiated the build of Aircraft 3, a carbon copy of Aircraft two, the prototype we’re flying now. By having two full scale piloted assets in the air, we will accelerate our test flight progress significantly over the coming year. To put this in context, for every hour the aircraft is flying, we generate double the amount of data within Wikipedia. And just on this point, I am incredibly pleased to say that we have another world leading test pilot joining us here at Vertical. He is one of only a handful of people in the world to have flown a full scale piloted eVTOL. This is another vote of confidence from people in the industry who know that Vertical can and will be successful. As I’ve already told you in our November 24 business update call, during 2025, we will initiate production for our certification aircraft with long-range parts purchasing. Now what does this mean? It means the next aircraft we build will be our certification aircraft. The design we will certify, the one we’ll bring to market, and the one you all will fly in. Now turning to our route certification. We are UK-based while our home regulator is the CAA. But importantly, they have a collaboration agreement with the EASA. There are two things to note where this is incredibly important. First of all, is the regulation under which we certify, SC VTOL. And second is the level of safety contained within that. The first point, the regulations are clear, transparent, you can double click on them, understand the work stack, and build a plan around it, this is why we are confident and comfortable putting out a clear certification date in 2028. The second important point is safety. Within this standard, there is a safety requirement of ten to the minus nine or one in a billion. This is ten to a hundred times safer than any other aircraft in the sector and definitively sets us apart from competition. This is the same level of safety as a large passenger carrying jet. But what does this mean? This means that we will be the only aircraft in the sector certified to this standard, and we will be the only aircraft that is a globally portable asset, which is what the aviation leasing industry needs. Now building on the above, I’ve already mentioned that we will have the safest aircraft in the sector. I genuinely believe that is what customers and end users will want when you’re introducing a new and novel technology. So as well as safety, why else is the VX4 the best-in-class and what sets us apart? Specifically, this is capacity for both passengers and luggage where we believe the VX4 will be industry-leading. For those in Europe, this is like being in the interior of a Bentley versus a Fiat 500. For those of you in the U.S., this is like being in an interior of a Cadillac Escalade, Lincoln Navigator versus a Fiat 500. There is simply no comparison. We will launch our aircraft with four comfortable business class seats and 30 kilos of luggage capacity per passenger. This means our aircraft meets the demands of today’s passengers flying globally, for example, between New York and London. Incredibly important, this airframe is also designed to accommodate six passengers. Minimal recertification, simply taking out the large seats and putting in six economy seats within the same airframe. Again, this is something that no one else in the industry can do. And just to be clear, to reverse engineer a higher level of safety or a larger cabin is almost impossible. These have to be thought of and designed in from day one. And these are things that definitively set us apart from the competition. Underpinning all of this are our proprietary battery packs. We are targeting the most powerful powertrain in the industry. Our current prototype is already demonstrating a peak power of 1.4 megawatts and incredibly important peak torque that is unbelievable. We have 16,000 Newton meters or 12,000-pound foot of peak torque. This is equivalent going to an automotive analogy of 10 Bugatti Chirons. It's a truly incredible piece of engineering by the team. Now turning to the final thing that sets us apart, that is our business model. We are not looking to boil the ocean. We are engineering, designing, assembling, selling and servicing an aircraft. And importantly, within that we will have battery-as-a-service. To a very high margin, this is very similar to the razorblade model, predictable long-term high margin revenue. Now within our business model, we are working with Tier 1 aerospace suppliers who understand what it takes to get a new aircraft off the drawing board, into the skies and certified. Also through this OEM focus, we are not exposing ourselves to operator risk. We have an outstanding order book of customers, airlines, helicopter operators, mobility operators, leasing companies who work extremely closely to ensure we are developing the right product to meet their passengers’ needs. As I mentioned, this is the biggest and best aircraft in the sector. It is also the safest. Now turning to funding. The key metric is the cost to certification. I anticipate we will ramp up our spending incrementally as we drive towards commercialization. However, we will maintain our diligent capital efficiency and I expect us to spend a significant amount less than many others in their move towards certification. So, wrapping up. Before I hand you over to Si, I would like to remind you of some of the great recent developments we've made in the last few months. In November we relaunched the business and strategy with Flight Path 2030, setting a clear roadmap for our plan to lead the sector by the end of the decade. We issued clearly defined financial and operating metrics for 2025, 2028 and 2030, including re-baselining the business to a stretching but ultimately credible and deliverable timeline for certification in 2028. This whole package was incredibly well received by customers and the wider industry. We have shown with this plan; we have an efficient OEM business model. And important to note, we have undertaken significant balance sheet restructuring and we are an investable proposition, having closed 220 million of refinancing and funding activities. During which, we equitized half of the Mudrick Capital floating rate convertible loan note of $130 million, resulting in a new majority owner, Mudrick Capital. In addition, we extended the term of the remainder of the loan note and fixed the conversion rate. Following this in January, we raised $90 million, $25 million follow on from current investors and over $60 million from investors who were new to the story. Just to be clear, this secures our funding through 2025. And in terms of the team, we had Dómhnal Slattery rejoining as Chair, bringing his unrivalled aviation industry experience to the business. And just last week, you will have seen the announcement of Eamonn Brennan as a Board Advisor, formerly Director General of Eurocontrol who controlled the skies over Europe, and the Chief Executive of the Irish Aviation Authority. With that, I would like to hand you over to Si to talk about his key role in executing our Flight Test Campaign.