Tag: MAX2

  • GoPro warns it may not survive financial troubles

    GoPro warns it may not survive financial troubles

    Key Takeaway

    – GoPro disclosed “substantial doubt” about its ability to continue as a going concern.
    – Revenue fell nearly 19% in 2025 to $651.5 million, with a net loss of $83.3 million.
    – Cash reserves declined by over half, from $102.8 million to $49.7 million.
    – Loan agreements treat the going concern warning as a default, risking all current financing.
    – The troubled launch of the MAX2 360-degree camera contributed to the financial decline.


    Financial Turmoil Hits Action Camera Pioneer

    GoPro, which was once the biggest name in the action camera market, is now fighting for its financial survival. The company disclosed substantial doubt about its ability to continue as a going concern in refiled financial statements published Monday (June 1). This sent shares down 8% in premarket trading.

    The warning, which would be a serious flag in any company’s filings, was included in GoPro’s amended 2025 annual report and its Q1 2026 quarterly report. Auditor PricewaterhouseCoopers separately added explanatory going concern language to its audit opinion, specifically touching on the severity of the situation. GoPro noted the circumstances behind the disclosure became more clear after it originally filed its annual report on March 12, 2026.

    Revenue Decline and Cash Depletion

    The numbers paint a grim picture as well. GoPro brought in $651.5 million in 2025 — down nearly 19% from the $801.5 million it made the year before — and still managed to lose $83.3 million in the process. Its cash pile almost halved in a single year, shrinking from $102.8 million to just $49.7 million, while its total accumulated losses now sit at $775.1 million. Part of the blame falls on the MAX2, GoPro’s 360-degree camera that had a troubled, delayed launch in September 2025. The company was also caught breaching its own loan conditions during the year — a warning sign that, in hindsight, foreshadowed exactly the situation it now finds itself in.

    Complex Financing and Default Risks

    The company currently holds $50 million in financing through arrangements with Farallon Capital Management and Wells Fargo Bank, alongside a separate $50 million convertible debenture agreement signed with YA II PN in February 2026. It gets more complicated. GoPro’s loan agreements contain clauses that treat this kind of warning as a default — similar to breaking a contract. And because its loans are interlinked, one default could legally trigger others simultaneously, which could put all of its financing at risk at once.

    Discussions and Future Uncertainity

    GoPro says it is actively in discussions with its lending partners to address the whole situation. For a brand that essentially invented the consumer action camera market and became a cultural icon among athletes and content creators, the disclosure isn’t really a good sign. GoPro has not announced any restructuring plans at this time.