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Archer Aviation signs deal with Korean Air for eVTOL Air Taxis

Archer Aviation announced on Monday that it had signed a partnership agreement with Korean Air for the commercialization of its electric air taxis throughout South Korea. The potential purchase of 100 aircraft is possible.

The deal reflects a race between electric vertical takeoff and landing developers who are racing to secure airline partners, win regulatory approvals and move from prototypes into paid service.

Early U.S. trading saw shares of Santa Clara-based company rise 6%.

Aerospace startups and incumbents are both promoting short-haul flights and airport transfers to replace congested ground transportation. However, the sector is still battling certification issues, infrastructure development and uncertain timelines for profitability.

Archer stated that the agreement targets deployments of Midnight eVTOL across "multiple applications and use cases" starting with government applications.

The aircraft was designed for flights of 10-20 minutes and two of the highest altitudes were achieved in a recent series of test flights.

Archer, a company backed by Boeing and Stellantis and owned by IndiGo and United Airlines in India, produces six aircrafts at two U.S. facilities.

Archer, a company that has yet to make a profit and is still in the red, expects a loss adjusted EBITDA of between $110 million and $130 million for the third quarter. This loss will be higher than last year's loss of $93 million.

Archer announced last week that it had won the bid to purchase Lilium's patent portfolio of approximately 300 patent assets related to advanced air mobility for 18 million Euros ($21 million), bringing its portfolio to more than 1,000 patent assets.

(source: Reuters)