Lucid Group (LCID) stock had a chaotic Tuesday after a report from electric-vehicles.com claimed the company was weighing a bankruptcy filing or a take-private deal. Lucid moved quickly to shut that down, calling the rumors “completely false.” The stock still closed down 16% at $4.62, and was trading at $4.43 in premarket Wednesday — down another 4.1%.
At its worst on Tuesday, LCID hit $2.37 intraday. It had climbed as high as $5.76 the same day. That kind of swing tells you how rattled the market got.
Coming into Wednesday, Lucid is down 56% year-to-date and has fallen roughly 80% over the past 12 months.
Lucid acknowledged it has retained AlixPartners, a restructuring advisory firm, to help improve execution and operations. But the company was clear: AlixPartners has not recommended bankruptcy to management or the board.
According to reports, AlixPartners has suggested Lucid focus on Gravity SUV production, scale back the Air sedan, prioritize the Uber robotaxi partnership and the Saudi AMP-2 plant, protect the Cosmos launch timeline for late 2026, and pause European expansion.
Lucid confirmed the advisory relationship but pushed back on any characterisation that it signals financial distress.
Cantor Fitzgerald analyst Andres Sheppard wrote Tuesday evening that Lucid was “funded well into next year.” He pointed to total liquidity of roughly $3.2 billion as of March, including about $2.5 billion in undrawn debt capacity.
In April, the company raised an additional $1.05 billion — including a $200 million investment from Uber, funds from Saudi Arabia’s PIF, and a public offering.
Morgan Stanley estimates Lucid will burn $3.7 billion in 2026, while raising around $2.5 billion in debt and $1 billion in equity during the year. The company’s gross profit margin sits at -95.6%, with a current ratio of just 1.02.
Wall Street projects Lucid won’t generate positive free cash flow until 2029, when annual deliveries would need to exceed 140,000 units. For context, Lucid delivered roughly 16,000 vehicles in 2025 and is expected to deliver around 21,000 in 2026.
Q2 deliveries came in at 3,953 vehicles — below the consensus estimate of 4,618, though up from 3,309 in Q2 2025.
Lucid reports second-quarter earnings on August 4. That call will be the first major public appearance for new CEO Silvio Napoli, who previously served as Chairman and CEO of Schindler Group. Analyst Sheppard says investors will be watching closely for Napoli’s plan to accelerate the path to profitability.
Morgan Stanley holds its Underweight rating with a $5 price target. Cantor Fitzgerald and Baird are both Neutral/Hold, with targets of $8 and $6, respectively.
The post Lucid (LCID) Stock Falls 16% After Bankruptcy Rumors — Company Denies Claims appeared first on CoinCentral.