Olympian Motors

olympianmotors.com

-10%

est. 2Y upside i

Series A

Next-generation, modular electric vehicles

Rank

#3747

Sector

Automotive, Electric Vehicles

Est. Liquidity

~7Y

Data Quality

Data: Low

Olympian Motors is an extremely high-risk equity play: a 10-person, $9M-funded hardware EV startup facing trillion-dollar incumbents in one of the most capital-intensive industries on earth, with only $648K in revenue and no confirmed YoY growth rate.

Last updated: May 13, 2026

Bull (10%)+200%

Foxconn manufacturing partnership and NVIDIA/AWS integrations enable a commercial Model O1 launch, growing revenue from $648K to $5M+ and supporting a Series B at ~$150M valuation by late 2027. Common stockholders see roughly 200% upside from an estimated $40M post-money Series A entry, after accounting for Series B dilution that reduces the theoretical ~275% paper gain.

Base (40%)+30%

Olympian grows revenue toward $2-3M but struggles with manufacturing scale in a capital-intensive sector, closing a bridge or modest Series B at ~$55-65M valuation. Employee equity at the estimated ~$40M entry valuation produces a 25-35% paper gain with no near-term liquidity and meaningful dilution from future rounds.

Bear (50%)-85%

Hardware EV manufacturing at scale proves impossible with $9M in total funding and only 10 employees; the company cannot close the cost, distribution, or brand gap against Tesla, Rivian, Ford, and GM, and fails to raise a Series B. Common stock approaches zero as Olympian exhausts its runway before reaching commercially viable production volume.

Est. time to liquidity~7.0 years

Preference Stack Risk

high

Funding Intensity

23%

With $9M in total preferred funding against an estimated ~$40M post-money Series A valuation, preferred stock represents approximately 22.5% of the cap table — common holders only participate meaningfully in proceeds above the $9M liquidation threshold.

Dilution Risk

high

A capital-intensive automotive hardware company at the Series A stage will require multiple future rounds (Series B, C, and potentially debt), each of which will substantially dilute early employee common stock before any liquidity event.

Secondary Liquidity

none

At 10 employees and $648K in revenue with no disclosed valuation, Olympian Motors has no secondary market activity and no near-term path to employee share liquidity.

Questions to Ask at the Interview

Strategic questions based on Olympian Motors's data — designed to show you've done your homework.

  • 1

    What is the planned production capacity and timeline for the Model O1, and how does the Foxconn partnership specifically contractually de-risk the path from prototype to commercial volume given your current $9M in capital?

  • 2

    With $648K in revenue and a freshly closed $9M Series A, what is the current monthly burn rate and runway in months, and what specific revenue or unit milestones trigger a Series B raise at a meaningful valuation step-up?

  • 3

    What is the total equity pool size and employee vesting schedule, and how does the cap table structure treat common stockholders relative to the $9M in preferred liquidation preferences in an exit below $40M?

Community

Valuation Sentiment

Our model estimates -10% upside. What do you think?

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Disclaimer: This analysis is AI-generated and does not constitute financial or career advice. Always conduct your own due diligence.