The loss-making electric carmaker said its sales improved in September and that it delivered 4,799 vehicles in the quarter ended Sept. 30 compared with 3,553 deliveries in the second quarter.

This comes at a time when electric car makers are battling an uncertain demand in China, the world's largest car market, as it rolls back subsidies on new energy vehicles amid criticism that some firms have become overly reliant on the funds.

China's Nio had said subsidies for its pricier ES8 model, a seven-seater sport-utility electric vehicle that is widely seen as a rival to Tesla Inc's Model X, were slashed by nearly 83% starting June.

Adding to its woes, Nio on Monday warned it did not have adequate cash for "continuous operation in the next 12 months" and was looking to obtain external financing.

The company, which counts Chinese internet giant Tencent Holdings and Hillhouse Capital Management as its shareholders, raised $1 billion last year in an initial public offering that valued it at $6.4 billion.

In May, Nio signed a pact with a government-b
acked fund for an investment of about $1.5 billion (1.14 billion pounds). (https://reut.rs/2ldpU8j)

The company said on Monday its balance of cash and cash equivalents, restricted cash and short-term investment was 1.96 billion yuan as of Sept. 30, 2019.

Larger rival Tesla said on Monday it has started delivering Model 3 electric cars from its strategic factory in Shanghai that begun operations less than a year ago, and that it plans to ramp up deliveries in January.

Nio Chief Executive Officer William Bin Li, however, sees little threat from that. "If you compare the Model 3 with our products, we believe our product is still very competitive," he said.

The company expects to deliver over 8,000 units in the fourth quarter.

Excluding items, Nio posted a smaller-than-expected loss of 2.38 yuan per share in the third quarter compared with the average analyst estimate of a loss of 2.43 yuan. Last year, net loss stood at 10.35 yuan per share.

Total revenue rose nearly 25% to 1.84 billion yuan (200.79 million pounds), beating analysts' estimates of $1.63 billion yuan, according to Refinitiv.

Nio shares were up nearly 53% to $3.70 in morning trade, erasing its year-to-date losses of nearly 45%.

(Reporting by Ambhini Aishwarya and Neha Malara in Bengaluru; Editing by Shinjini Ganguli)