Tag Archives: Nikola Corporation

Lucid CEO says the company could eventually be valued like Tesla

People test drive Dream Edition P and Dream Edition R electric vehicles at the Lucid Motors plant in Casa Grande, Arizona, September 28, 2021.

Caitlin O’Hara | Reuters

Lucid Group CEO Peter Rawlinson believes there’s a long runway for the electric vehicle start-up’s stock and market value to surpass traditional automakers and to eventually be valued more like industry leader Tesla.

Rawlinson, an ex-Tesla executive, regularly compares Lucid to his former employer in terms of in-house technologies and overall development of electric vehicles. He and CFO Sherry House on Wednesday both said the company’s recent run-up in stock is proof Wall Street is already viewing Lucid more like Tesla than a traditional automaker.

The company’s shares popped by more than 11% just before the market open Tuesday.

“I think the sky’s the limit in terms of valuation, but it’s all about execution,” he told CNBC during an interview Monday night following Lucid reporting its first quarterly financial results as a public company. “It’s all about execution, it’s all about scaling volume. And that’s my focus. And I think the share price lookup as a result.”

Lucid’s stock price is up by more than 80% since going public through a SPAC deal in July. It remains below its 52-week high of nearly $65 a share in February when it was reported that Lucid was nearing a deal.

Lucid’s market cap of roughly $79 billion is approaching Ford Motor’s at $80 billion, but still far below Tesla, which surged to more than $1 trillion this year. Rivian, an EV start-up that went public last week, has a market cap of about $140 billion.

“I feel great about our stock price,” House told CNBC during the joint interview. “The run-up that we’ve had, where it is today and also the growth trajectory, frankly, that’s in front of us. I see that we’re being regarded as a technology company with a platform that’s extensible across lots of vehicle variants and sustainable tech.”

Lucid’s first vehicle is called the Air sedan. It started delivering a $169,000 “Dream Edition” of the flagship car to customers in late-October, following commercial production beginning a month earlier at a new factory in Casa Grande, Arizona. The car has an industry-leading range of 520 miles.

Peter Rawlinson joined Lucid Motors in 2013 as chief technology officer, a role he has maintained since being named CEO of the company in April 2019.

Lucid

Rawlinson’s goal with the Air, which he believes has been accomplished, was to make “the best car in the world.” The Air on Monday was named MotorTrend’s car of the year, a coveted award in the automotive industry.

“I think the world recognizes we’ve got an amazing product,” Rawlinson said. “I think everyone realizes what I’ve been promising would be the best car in the world. It’s true. It’s happened.”

Lucid is among a handful of EV start-up companies to go public through deals with a so-called SPAC since last year. But unlike some of its SPAC peers, Lucid is actually generating revenue and producing vehicles. It also has thus far avoided any federal probes into potentially misleading statements to investors unlike others such as Nikola, Lordstown Motors and Canoo.

The young company isn’t yet profitable and is still in the early day of generating revenue. The automaker’s revenue in the third quarter was $232,000, largely from a battery deal with the Formula E electric racing league. It reported a net loss of $1.5 billion through the first nine months of the year, including a $524.4 million loss in the third quarter.

Lucid told investors in July that it expects to produce 20,000 Lucid Air sedans in 2022, generating more than $2.2 billion in revenue. Rawlinson confirmed that production target on Monday, but cautioned the “target is not without risk” due to an ongoing global disruption in automotive supply chains.

The company also told investors Monday that it has more than 17,000 reservations for its Air sedan, up from 13,000 through the third quarter.

Interior of the Lucid Air show car, which is expected to be produced beginning in 2021.

Lucid

Read original article here

At Nikola briefing, SEC official punts on question about Elon Musk

SpaceX founder and Tesla CEO Elon Musk looks on as he visits the construction site of Tesla’s gigafactory in Gruenheide, near Berlin, Germany, May 17, 2021.

Michele Tantussi | Reuters

During a Securities and Exchange Commission press conference Thursday concerning fraud charges against Nikola founder Trevor Milton, a member of the press asked the agency’s new Director of Enforcement, Gurbir S. Grewal, whether the financial regulators may take a “second look” at statements Elon Musk made about Tesla or its products on Twitter.

“You referenced CEOs making statements on social media making statements about their products,” asked the reporter, who did not identify himself.Elon Musk has made a number of statements, some of which have been provably false, on Twitter. Are you going to take a second look at Mr. Musk’s statements under this administration or is that something you’ve been following closely?”

Grewal declined to speak specifically about any investigations or matters beyond the SEC’s Trevor Milton complaint. However, he noted that: “Regardless of the methods used by corporate officials, we will hold them accountable for materially false statements that they make, especially in cases where investors are hurt as alleged here.”

Musk’s habit of disseminating product and other company information on Twitter has inspired fans and critics alike to track his every interaction on Twitter, and his many promises and predictions shared there. Those statements have sometimes landed Musk and the company in hot water.

As part of its risk disclosures in Tesla’s most recent quarterly earnings filing, the company reminded shareholders that it was previously investigated by the SEC over Musk’s tweets in which he said he was planning to take his electric vehicle maker private at $420 a share, and had funding secured. Tesla and the SEC reached a settlement agreement over that matter originally in September 2018, and entered into a revised settlement agreement in April 2019.

The SEC has also investigated Tesla statements on Model 3 production rates — that investigation was resolved in Dec. 2019, the filing says — and has “issued a subpoena seeking information concerning certain financial data and contracts including Tesla’s regular financing arrangements.”



Read original article here

Lordstown Motors shares fall as much as 12% after confirming SEC inquiry

Shares of electric vehicle start-up Lordstown Motors tumbled by as much as 12% during intraday trading Thursday morning after the company confirmed the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has requested information regarding claims by a short-seller that it misled investors.

Hindenburg Research accused Lordstown in a report last week of using “fake” orders to raise capital for its first product, an all-electric pickup truck called the Endurance. The short-seller claimed the pickup was years away from production, however Lordstown maintains it’s on track to start producing the vehicle in September.

Lordstown CEO Steve Burns declined to comment on the SEC inquiry Thursday morning to CNBC. He told investors during the company’s first earnings call as a public company Wednesday that it was “cooperating” with federal officials.

Burns said the company’s highly-touted pre-orders of more than 100,000 pickups — a main target of the Hindenburg report — were simply meant to gauge customer interest, not to confirm future sales. The company previously categorized the pre-orders as “non-binding production reservations” as well, but Burns also has referred to them as “very serious orders.”

“We’ve always been very clear, right? These are just what they’re intended to be. These are non-binding, letters of intent. They’re called pre-orders out in the real world,” he said Thursday on CNBC’s “Squawk Box.” He later added, “I don’t think anyone thought that we had actual orders, right? That’s just not the nature of this business.”

Shares of Lordstown have tumbled by about 24% since Hindenburg released the report Friday. The stock was down by about 10% during intraday trading Thursday morning. The company’s market cap is $2.3 billion.

The company on Wednesday also increased its guidance on capital and operational expenses for this year, largely citing decisions to accelerate the development of its second product (a van) and do more in house production.

Lordstown went public through a special purpose acquisition company, or SPAC, in October. It is among a growing group of electric vehicle start-ups going public through deals with SPACs, which have become a popular way of raising money on Wall Street because they have a more streamlined regulatory process than traditional initial public offerings.

Hindenburg’s report on Lordstown comes about six months after it released a scathing report regarding another EV-SPAC start-up Nikola. That report also led to federal inquires as well as the resignation of the company’s founder and chairman, Trevor Milton.

Short selling is when investors, mostly professional hedge fund managers, borrow shares of a stock from a broker and sell them in the hope of buying them back cheaper. If the stock drops, the investors make a profit off the difference when they return the shares to the broker.

Read original article here