Mullen Automotive Stock is a Sleeper EV Play That May Surprise You

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It’s not often you see performance like that of Mullen Automotive (NASDAQ:MULN) stock. One month ago, shares of the electric vehicle (EV) maker hit a low of 52 cents. Today, MULN stock sits 477% higher at $3 a share after retail investors poured in.

Image of a red Mullen car.
Image of a red Mullen car.

Source: betto rodrigues / Shutterstock.com

Yet, shares are down 43% year to date and 71% since Mullen went public via a reverse merger with Net Element in early November.

The volatility in MULN stock is par for the course for an EV play. Last year, EV stocks were so hot companies were merging with special purpose acquisition companies (SPAC) and going public with multibillion-dollar market caps that rivaled those of legacy automakers. But as fear of inflation and higher interest rates roiled the market, money quickly rotated out of growth plays, including high-flying EV stocks.

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Even with the sell-off, I have been writing for months now about how ridiculously overpriced most EV stocks are. While there’s no shortage of hype surrounding names like Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) and Lucid Group (NASDAQ:LCID), it takes more than selling a cool car to make it in the automotive business long term.

Mullen Automotive is a bit different, though. It has a market cap of just $105 million and doesn’t make headlines often. But MULN stock could just be the sleeper EV play that surprises investors.

EV Investors Overlooking an Adoption Challenge

Amid all the headlines about sexy, new companies making sexy, new electric vehicles, the media and investors may have glossed over a real-world challenge to EV adoption.

As Bloomberg’s Liam Denning points out, around two-thirds of U.S. states have laws on the books that prohibit or limit direct sales by automakers. Instead, they require vehicles to be sold and serviced through independent franchises.

Meanwhile, Tesla and other EV makers have sought to sell their vehicles directly to consumers. Denning notes that EV penetration is higher in states without such dealership laws.

“Dealership laws have helped traditional automakers by acting as a brake on EV startups. But as those startups surpass incumbents in valuation anyway and start changing the way cars are sold and serviced, the laws begin to look less like a defensive moat and more like a restrictive wall,” Denning concludes.

Mullen, of course, is subject to these laws as well, but I wouldn’t necessarily lump it in with the other still-overpriced, big-name EV makers.

What Set Mullen Automotive Apart

Mullen is not a new EV company. It was founded in 2014 when Mullen Motor Cars and CODA Automotive merged.