Investors wanted Nikola to be the next Tesla. It's not.

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Wednesday, December 2, 2020

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How the next breakout star for electric vehicles veered off course.

Everyone wants to invest early in the next Tesla (TSLA), which has seen its stock skyrocket 559% this year. Tesla’s rise has been fueled by the electric vehicle company’s ability to turn a profit for five quarters in a row for the first time in its history, and its impending addition to the S&P 500.

CEO and founder of U.S. Nikola Trevor Milton speaks during presentation of its new full-electric and hydrogen fuel-cell battery trucks in partnership with CNH Industrial, at an event in Turin, Italy, December 2, 2019. REUTERS/Massimo Pinca
Former-CEO and founder of U.S. Nikola Trevor Milton speaks during presentation of its new full-electric and hydrogen fuel-cell battery trucks in partnership with CNH Industrial, at an event in Turin, Italy, December 2, 2019. REUTERS/Massimo Pinca

The firm’s performance coupled with signs of improving EV interest in the U.S., China, and Europe has driven investors to search for the next breakout star in the sector, with many hoping it would be alternative-energy truck company Nikola (NKLA). They were wrong.

With a charismatic leader at the helm in 38-year-old Trevor Milton, Nikola went public via a SPAC (special purpose acquisition company) on June 4 at $37.55 a share. Its stock quickly shot up as high as $93.99 just five days later. General Motors, seeking to get a leg up in alternative-energy transportation, planned to take as much as a $2 billion stake in the firm.

But Nikola is no Tesla. Allegations of fraud spurred by a short-seller report has both the Securities and Exchange Commission and Justice Department looking into the firm. And on Monday the company rolled out a watered-down version of the GM deal that eliminates the $2 billion stake and kills Nikola’s electric Badger pickup. The very same one that Milton said would eventually take on Ford’s F-150.

In the end, the deal that was supposed to put Nikola on a path to greatness is, as Wedbush analyst Dan Ives put it, “nothing to write home about.”

Nikola’s Hindenburg problems

Out of the gate, Nikola looked like a promising firm developing hydrogen-powered tractor trailers for the transportation industry. But after Nikola went public, short seller Hindenburg dropped a bombshell of a report accusing the upstart company of massive fraud including faking its product demos. Milton and Nikola denied the claims, though Milton stepped down as CEO shortly after the report went public.

Hindenburg said a video appearing to show one of the company’s tractor trailers driving under its own power was in fact simply showing the vehicle coasting down a hill. It also said that a prior stage demonstration of a tractor trailer that was supposed to be operating on its own power actually showed the vehicle plugged into a power supply under the stage.