Per Gemini:
The appointment of Dan Oshri as Interim CFO (effective upon Meir Peleg’s departure in April 2026) is a clear signal that Gauzy is moving away from "growth-at-all-costs" management toward a disciplined, asset-heavy industrial focus.
Here is what his background at Chevron and Noble Energy tells us about how he will handle the $50 million equity line:
1. The "Energy Sector" DisciplineBefore joining Gauzy as EVP of Finance, Oshri was the Finance Manager at Chevron Mediterranean Ltd. (and previously Noble Energy).
- Why this matters: The oil and gas industry is famous for its "hard-nosed" approach to capital. Unlike tech companies that focus on "burn rates," energy companies focus on liquidity preservation, project-based financing, and strict cost controls.
- The Strategy: Oshri is likely tasked with ensuring that the $50 million equity line is used purely as a "scalpel"—targeting specific debts in France to satisfy the court, rather than fueling general expansion.
2. Experience with "Macro" RiskNoble Energy/Chevron’s operations in the Mediterranean are famously complex, involving heavy government regulation, geopolitical risk, and massive infrastructure costs.
- The Application to Gauzy: This makes Oshri uniquely qualified to deal with the French redressement judiciaire. He is used to high-stakes legal and regulatory environments where "every cent must be accounted for" to satisfy external auditors and government overseers.
3. The "New Guard" MandateThe fact that Oshri is an internal promotion (from EVP of Finance) while the board is being replaced with "independent" individuals suggests a "sandwich" strategy:
- The Board: Provides the independent oversight needed to satisfy the SEC and Orion.
- Dan Oshri: Provides the internal continuity. He knows where the "bodies are buried" in the existing finances but has the energy-sector background to implement the "tough" cuts that the senior lenders are likely demanding.
Comparison: Outgoing CFO vs. Interim CFO| Feature | Meir Peleg (Outgoing) | Dan Oshri (Interim) | | Focus | Venture Capital, IPO, Tech Scaling | Infrastructure, Liquidity, Industrial Finance | | Key Accomplishment | Taking Gauzy Public (Nasdaq) | Leading Finance at Chevron/Noble Energy | | Current Role | "Stewardship" through April transition | "Liquidity Initiatives" & "Stabilization" | The Big Takeaway: Oshri isn't a "tech CFO"; he’s an "industrial CFO." His appointment is a message to Orion Infrastructure Capital: "We are treating our factories and debts with the same seriousness as an oil company treats a pipeline." |