Lucid Gets A Big $915 Million Boost From The Saudis

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Lucid has that Saudi money, Brits are rocking out to Christmas songs about New York on the road trips, the Feds kick the can down the road, and the Takata death toll rises.

Welcome to The Morning Dump, bite-sized stories corralled into a single article for your morning perusal. If your morning coffee’s working a little too well, pull up a throne and have a gander at the best of the rest of yesterday.

Lucid Gets Liquidity, Which I Shall Call Luquidity

Lucid Air

It’s a truism of building cars that the first car a company makes costs a $1 billion (or $400 million, or whatever), and the company slowly keeps making and selling until all the money it gets for selling the cars finally surpasses the cost of developing and building them, and then the company reaches profitability. That’s a little oversimplified, but you get the point. For a massive car company it’s not a big deal because massive car companies don’t build one car at a time. For smaller companies it can create a cash crunch.

American electric automaker Lucid has cleared the first few hurdles to be coming a real automaker, and you can see the company’s cars on the road. Still, Lucid is losing hundreds of millions of dollars every quarter, and to turn that around it has to ramp up production of the quite interesting Lucid Gravity.

What Lucid needs is cash, and it just announced a successful $1.5 billion haul. The first $600 million came from selling 56.2 million common shares of the company at market prices (they’re listed on the NASDAQ). What about the rest?

The successful capital raise of approximately $1.515 billion, which includes approximately $915 million that Lucid expects to raise through the private placement of approximately 85.7 million shares to an affiliate of the Public Investment Fund (“PIF”), Ayar Third Investment Company (“Ayar”), pending settlement in December 2022, will be used, as previously disclosed, for general corporate purposes, which may include, among other things, capital expenditures and working capital. As previously disclosed, the price that Ayar is paying in the private placement equals the volume-weighted average price achieved in the “at-the-market” offering. This private placement is not a part of the “at-the-market” offering and is in addition thereto. Subject to certain exceptions, Ayar has agreed not to, among other things, offer, sell, pledge or otherwise transfer any shares of our common stock for six months after the date of the private placement.

The Public Investment Fund is a great name. You see that and you might think: “It’s money, for the public!” And this is true, assuming you recognize that the public in this case represents the Saudi public, and that the money is actually controlled by the Saudi Royal Family. They already own a huge amount of Lucid, as well as Uber, and Electronic Arts. This deal seems to keep them roughly equal with where they were before the fundraise (about 62% of the company).

This is good news for Lucid and, probably, anyone who invested in Lucid, though the Bank of Japan is out here throwing bombs this morning so who really knows.

So, About That Manchin Story Yesterday

Tmd Janet Yellin

Remember that big story yesterday about West Virginia v. South Korea and Joe Manchin and all that mishegas about whether or not Ubers and rental cars qualify for federal EV tax credits? A key piece in that story is that we’d find out what happens when the Treasury Department announces guidance at the end of the year. What did the government do? What government does best: kick the can down the road.

From the Associated Press:

The U.S. Treasury Department on Monday said it will issue proposed guidance for the critical mineral and battery component requirements in March, effectively delaying those eligibility restrictions in the $7,500 tax credit for new electric vehicles.

[…]

Instead, Treasury said it will release information before the end of the year that will outline the “anticipated direction” of the critical mineral and battery component requirements that new EVs must meet to qualify. The information also will help automakers “prepare to be able to identify vehicles eligible for the tax credit when the new requirements go into effect,” the department said.

Hahahahahaha. Technically, this means that the tax credit continues until March, I guess?

The Brits Love “Fairytale Of New York” by the Pogues ft Kirsty MacColl For Christmas Driving

As has been well-established, I’m a big fan of Skoda. I try to read all of the Skoda news. I don’t share all the Skoda news because I understand that this fascination of mine is perhaps limited only to me. A release from Skoda this morning caught my eye, though not for the reason one might expect.

Most of the release is dedicated to “research” Skoda did that found out 23% of drivers in the UK are going to reduce their mileage because everything is expensive now after they catapulted themselves out of Europe and trashed their economy… because reasons.

What caught my eye was the song chosen as the most popular one for Christmas road trips.

Regardless of where Christmas is spent, and no matter the amount of time spent in the car this festive period, ŠKODA research has also revealed what’s on the top of the Christmas driving song playlist for journeys to visit family and friends.

The results speak for themselves, with a clear winner, the Fairytale of New York with 26% of the vote. In second place was Driving Home for Christmas by Chris Rea with 23% and third place went to Last Christmas by Wham! with 20%.

The ŠKODA UK Christmas driving playlist, ranked according to popularity, is as follows:

  1. Fairytale of New York (The Pogues ft. Kirsty MacColl)

  2. Driving Home for Christmas (Chris Rea)

  3. Last Christmas (Wham!)

  4. I Wish It Could Be Christmas Everyday (Wizzard)

  5. All I Want For Christmas Is You (Mariah Carey)

  6. Merry Christmas Everybody (Slade)

  7. Do They Know It’s Christmas? (Band Aid)

  8. Merry Christmas Everyone (Shakin’ Stevens)

  9. It’s Beginning To Look A Lot Like Christmas (Michael Bublé)

  10. Step Into Christmas (Elton John)

Wait, really? It’s a good song! I live in New York and you sometimes hear it on the radio, but it’s not a popular song. More of a novelty.

It turns out the Brits actually love this song. This isn’t some Skoda weirdness. There’s a whole Billboard article on the phenomena. It’s amazing to me that the most popular holiday song in the United Kingdom is about a Christmas in New York (and a pretty rough one at that).

If You Have A Takata Airbag You Gotta Get That Fixed

Dodge Magnum

The Takata airbag recall crisis occurred before this site existed, but the repercussions continue to be felt. The faulty airbags contain a chemical called ammonium nitrate to inflate the devices in the case of an accident. In warm and humid environments the chemicals can become more volatile and, instead of gently [Ed note: I dunno about “gently.” This is an airbag, here. -DT] filling the bag to protect a car’s passenger in an accident, it instead sends metal shrapnel into the cabin.

In spite of all the work done to recall vehicles with these airbags, many cars have not had their airbags replaced under the free recall. According to the Associated Press, another death has been linked to the exploding airbags in a Steallantis vehicle.

Stellantis announced two deaths in November caused by the air bags and said it suspected the inflators caused another. The company formerly known as Fiat Chrysler confirmed the third death early Monday.

Stellantis is urging people to stop driving Dodge Magnum wagons, Dodge Challenger and Charger muscle cars and Chrysler 300 sedans from the 2005 through 2010 model years.

Since 2009, the exploding air bags have killed at least 33 people worldwide, including 24 in the United States.

All three deaths this year were in warm-weather U.S. states and happened since April, the company said.

A recall is no fun, but I brought in one of my vehicles for the Takata recall a few years ago and it wasn’t a long procedure. It was certainly better than getting in an accident and having my airbag grenade into my face.

The Flush

What are your favorite holiday songs? The off-key Michael Caine “Thankful Heart” from “A Muppet Christmas Carol” gets me every time.

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Photos: Lucid, US Dept. of Treasury, Stellantis

 

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66 thoughts on “Lucid Gets A Big $915 Million Boost From The Saudis

  1. Two Christmas albums:
    Mannheim Steamroller Christmas(the first one).
    One that has “Do You Hear What I Hear” by Bing Crosby on along with good recordings of traditional songs, like the Reader’s Digest series.

  2. I’m a Brit. Please ignore the result of absolutely everything that is decided by voting here.

    I’ve no idea how we manage to get it all so wrong.

    I swear some people think voting is trying to guess the final outcome, rather than choosing the one that’s best.

  3. The British seem to love New York City. Nothing against New York but I don’t get it. I don’t know who wrote Last Christmas (Wham) and I don’t want to know. I might hunt them down to punish them for their sins. My favorite Christmas songs are the religious ones. My favorite pop holiday tune is, “Same Old Lang Syne.” Plays like a movie.

  4. Each Lucid now has a bone saw in the frunk now?

    I’m of two minds on Lucid: I’m glad they’re here because we need more EV makers shaking up the legacy makers. I’m not glad they’re taking money from King Bone Saw. I’m glad that Saudi Arabia is looking out for its people by diversifying away from oil. I’m not glad that Saudi Arabia is a (at this moment sorta benevolent) dictatorship that Lucid’s success will help keep in place, even if only a little.

  5. I’ve worked in retail long enough that there are no Christmas songs that I look forward to hearing. I can tolerate them, but there’s no joy left in Christmas music on the radio or as background music.

    I still look forward to live performances of The Nutcracker, church choirs, and other similar performance art because there’s still life and passion in them, even though they are often born of indoctrination.

    But any life or interest that Christmas recordings may have had has been mercilessly ground out of them by the wheels of retail capitalism, and the office and store managers who choose the muzak played in workplaces.

    To me, even the best, most recent and fresh Christmas recordings are simply to be endured. Classic pop Christmas tunes are the worst. After 1000s of replays, “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen”, “Holly Jolly Christmas”, “Santa Baby”, “Baby It’s Cold Outside” and “Jingle Bell Rock” are among the worst audio curses known to humanity no matter who performed the recording.

  6. No offense to those who can, but I can’t stand any of the traditional Christmas songs anymore. For my money, the best one by far is Robert Earl Keen’s “Merry Christmas from the Family”. There has never been a more uniquely American take on a Christmas song.

  7. I maintain that you really only need 2 Christmas albums:

    1. “A Christmas Gift for You From Phil Spector.”
    Just put all of the crazy Spector thoughts out of your head and listen to the smooth sounds of Darlene Love and the ‘Wall of Sound.’
    2. “A Charlie Brown Christmas.”
    No more needs to be said.

    If you have those 2, you’ve got the best stuff covered.

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