EV stocks ride January wave on price cuts, takeover interest
Welcome to Callaway Climate Insights. January's been hot for more than just global temperatures. Check out the graphic on EV stocks here - and share.
In today’s issue:
— EV stocks lead January rally on price wars, takeover interest
— So just how complicated are the new EV tax credits?
— Forget obscene oil earnings — new data show renewable investment topped fossil fuel financing for the first time last year. Here’s why there’s no looking back.
— The EU could boost its own green subsidies and tax credits
— New snow-making tech could end up being worse than the problem it’s designed to solve
A spate of selling on Wall Street this week ahead of the Federal Reserve Meeting today and Wednesday has put the brakes on a surprising January rally in electric vehicle stocks, which had some long-dormant names such as Lucid Group LCID 0.00%↑ and Nikola Corp. NKLA 0.00%↑ spiking in recent sessions.
Fired up by a budding price war between the likes of Tesla TSLA 0.00%↑ , Ford Motor Co. F 0.00%↑ and others, investors leaped back into the EV sector this past month in the hopes that a weaker economic downturn than expected and the beginning of a new bull market might continue to drive the mass shift among car buyers to EVs.
Tesla started the run just two weeks ago by slashing prices on some of its most popular models by up to 20%, simultaneously igniting new demand and pissing off existing owners who bought only months ago at higher prices. Ford announced cuts to its Mach-3 EV on Monday. All cuts are designed in part to make the models eligible for tax credits offered by President Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act.
But no stock has jumped as much as Lucid Motors, which is up more than a third in the past week on stalk that Saudi Arabia’s sovereign fund, which owns 65% of the company, may buyout the rest and take it private. Lucid shares have been a disappointment in the past few years, and the Saudis might be willing to just take it out rather than watch its public value decline further.
Consumer demand for EVs never really faded during the inflation spiral last year. If anything, lack of supply helped boost interest. Even with talk of a recession coming, it seems clear the EV transition will continue, and be even bigger this year now that prices are being cut. Investors are making their bets on who will come out ahead.
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