What Happened to Polestar?
Ticker: PSNYSPAC Year: 2022Merger: 2022
Return
-98.0%
Current Price
$0.21
Peak Price
$13
Trust Size
$800M
Summary
Polestar, the Swedish EV brand backed by Volvo parent Geely, went public via SPAC at a $20B valuation. Despite selling real cars and having Volvo's manufacturing infrastructure, the stock has collapsed 98% to $0.21.
What Happened
Polestar was supposed to be one of the 'safe' EV SPACs. Backed by Chinese auto giant Geely (which also owns Volvo), Polestar had real manufacturing capacity, a growing lineup of vehicles (Polestar 2, 3, 4), and access to Volvo's global dealer network. The company merged with Gores Guggenheim in June 2022 at a $20 billion valuation.
The fundamentals were better than most EV SPACs. Polestar sold over 50,000 cars in 2023 â far more than most competitors. The Polestar 2 earned positive reviews, and new models were in development. The Volvo/Geely parentage provided manufacturing and engineering credibility.
But even with real cars and real sales, Polestar bled money. Each vehicle sold at a loss, and the company required continuous capital infusions. Competition from Tesla's price cuts, Chinese EVs flooding European markets, and a slowdown in EV demand growth all squeezed Polestar's already-thin margins.
The stock collapsed from $13 to $0.21 â a 98% decline â without even requiring a reverse split. Geely's support has kept Polestar alive, but at its current price, the company's market cap has fallen below $1 billion for a carmaker that sells 50,000+ vehicles annually. It's the clearest example of how even legitimate EV companies were wildly overvalued in the SPAC era.
Key People
Timeline
2022-06-24
SPAC merger with Gores Guggenheim closes at $20B valuation
2022-11-01
Stock peaks around $13
2023-02-01
Delivers 51,491 vehicles in full year 2022
2024-01-01
Stock falls below $2, going-concern concerns mount
2025-01-01
Trading at $0.21 â 98% below merger price