When SPACs flooded the market back in 2021, Lucid Group rode the wave straight to public markets with sky-high expectations. Fast forward to today, and the stock has plummeted over 87% in five years. The problem? Most companies that went public via SPAC merger during that era were fundamentally unprepared for actual market conditions—and Lucid is no exception.
The EV industry looked bulletproof back then. Capital flowed freely, valuations stretched absurdly high, and everyone wanted a piece of the electric vehicle revolution. What they didn’t anticipate was the brutal market correction of 2022, which decimated nearly every SPAC target that had overextended itself.
Cash Burn and Hard Math
Here’s where Lucid’s situation gets genuinely concerning. The company isn’t just struggling—it’s hemorrhaging cash at an alarming rate. Through the first nine months of 2025, Lucid posted a loss of $8.50 per diluted share. That’s the kind of number that keeps investors up at night.
The production gap tells the real story:
Q3 2025 deliveries: approximately 4,100 vehicles
Additional vehicles produced for Saudi Arabia assembly: 1,000
Year-to-date deliveries: roughly 10,500
Full-year target: 18,000 vehicles
Do the math. To hit their annual guidance, Lucid would need to deliver nearly 7,500 vehicles in Q4 alone. Most Wall Street analysts are skeptical this is achievable, and frankly, so should you be.
External Pressures Piling Up
It’s not all internal mismanagement. Lucid is getting hammered by external forces that hit the entire EV sector simultaneously. The $7,500 federal electric vehicle tax credit got wiped out by policy changes, which directly suppresses consumer demand for premium EVs. Simultaneously, trade tariffs have increased manufacturing costs and squeezed already-thin margins.
The broader EV market is also struggling. Sure, Q3 saw a brief surge in deliveries as consumers rushed to capture the tax credit before expiration, but that was artificial demand—not sustainable growth.
The Uber Partnership: A Lifeline or a Mirage?
In July, Uber Technologies committed $300 million to Lucid as part of a robotaxi development partnership. On paper, this looks like validation. Uber plans to deploy over 20,000 robotaxis within six years, and Lucid will help build the vehicles.
But here’s the disconnect: a $300 million investment barely addresses Lucid’s fundamental burn rate. While it provides some breathing room, it doesn’t solve the core problem—the company needs to prove it can produce vehicles profitably at scale, and soon.
Valuation Reality Check
With a $4 billion market cap, Lucid still trades at a significant premium relative to its actual output and profitability timeline. Yes, investors are betting on long-term EV market recovery and Lucid’s technological advantages. But hope isn’t a financial strategy.
Until Lucid demonstrates that it can:
Meet production guidance consistently
Substantially reduce cash burn
Achieve positive unit economics
Navigate the challenging EV market environment
…the stock remains a high-risk, low-probability investment.
The Bottom Line
Lucid makes genuinely good vehicles. The engineering and design are solid. But financial strength matters just as much as product quality in manufacturing. The company is walking a tightrope between ambition and survival, and the margin for error is razor-thin.
Investors would be wise to wait until Lucid firms up its balance sheet and slows its cash hemorrhage before diving in. There will be better entry points.
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Why Lucid Stock Keeps Getting Left Up the Pole by Investors
The SPAC Hangover That Never Goes Away
When SPACs flooded the market back in 2021, Lucid Group rode the wave straight to public markets with sky-high expectations. Fast forward to today, and the stock has plummeted over 87% in five years. The problem? Most companies that went public via SPAC merger during that era were fundamentally unprepared for actual market conditions—and Lucid is no exception.
The EV industry looked bulletproof back then. Capital flowed freely, valuations stretched absurdly high, and everyone wanted a piece of the electric vehicle revolution. What they didn’t anticipate was the brutal market correction of 2022, which decimated nearly every SPAC target that had overextended itself.
Cash Burn and Hard Math
Here’s where Lucid’s situation gets genuinely concerning. The company isn’t just struggling—it’s hemorrhaging cash at an alarming rate. Through the first nine months of 2025, Lucid posted a loss of $8.50 per diluted share. That’s the kind of number that keeps investors up at night.
The production gap tells the real story:
Do the math. To hit their annual guidance, Lucid would need to deliver nearly 7,500 vehicles in Q4 alone. Most Wall Street analysts are skeptical this is achievable, and frankly, so should you be.
External Pressures Piling Up
It’s not all internal mismanagement. Lucid is getting hammered by external forces that hit the entire EV sector simultaneously. The $7,500 federal electric vehicle tax credit got wiped out by policy changes, which directly suppresses consumer demand for premium EVs. Simultaneously, trade tariffs have increased manufacturing costs and squeezed already-thin margins.
The broader EV market is also struggling. Sure, Q3 saw a brief surge in deliveries as consumers rushed to capture the tax credit before expiration, but that was artificial demand—not sustainable growth.
The Uber Partnership: A Lifeline or a Mirage?
In July, Uber Technologies committed $300 million to Lucid as part of a robotaxi development partnership. On paper, this looks like validation. Uber plans to deploy over 20,000 robotaxis within six years, and Lucid will help build the vehicles.
But here’s the disconnect: a $300 million investment barely addresses Lucid’s fundamental burn rate. While it provides some breathing room, it doesn’t solve the core problem—the company needs to prove it can produce vehicles profitably at scale, and soon.
Valuation Reality Check
With a $4 billion market cap, Lucid still trades at a significant premium relative to its actual output and profitability timeline. Yes, investors are betting on long-term EV market recovery and Lucid’s technological advantages. But hope isn’t a financial strategy.
Until Lucid demonstrates that it can:
…the stock remains a high-risk, low-probability investment.
The Bottom Line
Lucid makes genuinely good vehicles. The engineering and design are solid. But financial strength matters just as much as product quality in manufacturing. The company is walking a tightrope between ambition and survival, and the margin for error is razor-thin.
Investors would be wise to wait until Lucid firms up its balance sheet and slows its cash hemorrhage before diving in. There will be better entry points.