[QUOTE="Rashid510,
Business 101. When your trying to iterate on a product, push to production, manage changes and speed that x10 (similar to the Tesla model). Money gets spent quite alot. Also tough when your also marketing to a small niche.[/QUOTE]
That was kinda my point. Revenues looks good but expenses (the other side of the ledger) didn't. However, at that stage in the game I wouldn't think it unusual. Most savvy invertors would view that as a short term situation and look beyond at the real potential once costs got better controlled. Of course, that assumes there was some evidence that those expenses could EVER be brought in line with whatever sales forecasts they had. Apparently, the investment community determined they could not be, at least in the timeframe they typical demand in exchange for their money. Again, totally speculating here, I wonder why nobody had any faith the company could bring those expenses under control? Bad subcontracts? Poor supply chain? Lack of fiscal discipline? Too much waste? Labor costs? Operating costs? Pet projects? Excessive R&D? Too many engineering changes? These things usually boil down to a few basic causes, its just business 101.