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‘Too early’ to talk IPO, Redwood Materials’ incoming CFO says

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Why This Matters

Redwood Materials' appointment of Deepak Ahuja as CFO highlights its strategic focus on growth and stability amid ongoing restructuring. While the company remains cautious about an IPO, its strong investor backing and recent funding round position it for future expansion in battery recycling and energy storage. This development underscores the company's potential to influence the sustainable tech supply chain and energy industry.

Key Takeaways

Redwood Materials has finally found a new chief financial officer roughly a year and a half after its last one departed. He’s a familiar face to the former Tesla executives running the battery recycling and energy storage company.

On Monday, Redwood Materials said it has hired former Tesla finance chief Deepak Ahuja as its new CFO. Ahuja joins an executive team that includes Tesla’s former CTO (JB Straubel, Redwood’s founder and CEO) and former Tesla powertrain vice president Colin Campbell (Redwood’s CTO), among a number of other Tesla expats throughout the ranks. Most recently, Ahuja was chief finance and business officer at drone company Zipline.

But despite Ahuja’s many years running Tesla’s finances, and a hot IPO market for anything remotely related to AI data centers, he tells TechCrunch that it’s “too early” to talk about going public.

“Naturally, an IPO is a potential outcome for any private company, and we’ll talk about it when the time is right,” he said. Part of his caution, he said, was because Redwood Materials has so far had no trouble raising money from blue-chip investors. The company in January closed a $425 million Series E funding round that brought its total capital raised to more than $2 billion and its valuation to over $6 billion. It also added Google’s and Nvidia’s venture arm to its cap table.

“Redwood has, I’d say, the crème de la crème of investors already, who do have deep pockets,” Ahuja said. “If they’re excited, they’ll fund. But I also expect that new investors will see what Redwood is doing, and they’ll get equally excited, and will want to come in and invest and offer us, perhaps, good terms as well.”

Ahuja’s appointment comes at a pivotal moment for Redwood Materials. The company recently lost its chief operating officer (another former Tesla exec) to retirement, along with at least three other vice presidents. Those executives left amidst a restructuring that affected 10% of its workforce (or around 135 employees), as TechCrunch first reported last month, while the company shifts resources toward its rapidly growing energy storage business.

Ahuja told TechCrunch he is “excited by very innovative technology solutions that impact our climate [and] that address our energy needs,” and he’s stayed close with Straubel since the pair left Tesla in 2019. In fact, Ahuja told TechCrunch that he’s a “small investor” in Redwood Materials.

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