The Columbus Dispatch

GM walks away from a stake in Nikola

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NEW YORK – General Motors will not be taking a stake in the electric vehicle company Nikola, which announced Monday that it would scuttle one of its marquee vehicles, an electric and hydrogen-powered pickup. Shares of Nikola plunged 26%. Nikola on Monday released updated terms between the companies for a supply agreement related to GM’S fuel-cell system, replacing an agreement signed in September. That deal would have given GM an 11% stake in Nikola.

The early agreement would also have allowed Nikola to use GM’S new battery electric truck underpinni­ngs for the Badger and its fuel-cell and battery technology as well. That is no longer part of the agreement, essentiall­y gutting Nikola’s plans for an alternativ­e fuel pickup called the Badger.

Nikola said Monday that it will begin refunding deposits made by customers who wanted first dibs on that pickup.

“In a nutshell, the signing of GM as a partner is a positive but ultimately no ownership/equity stake in Nikola and the billions of R&D potentiall­y now off the table is a major negative blow to the Nikola story,” said Wedbush analyst Dan Ives. “This went from a game changer deal for Nikola to a good supply partnershi­p but nothing to write home about.”

Doubts about the partnershi­p began to arise in late September as a deadline approached and GM said negotiatio­ns about its $2 billion role in agreement were ongoing.

That announceme­nt, which sent Nikola shares sliding, came just days after Nikola founder and Chairman Trevor Milton resigned after Hindenburg Research, a company that’s betting Nikola stock will drop, accused Nikola of fraud. Nikola denies the allegation­s and called them misleading.

Hindenburg said Nikola’s success was an “intricate fraud” and included a video showing a truck rolling downhill to give the impression it was cruising on a highway, and stenciling the words “hydrogen electric” on the side of a vehicle that was actually powered by natural gas.

The Securities and Exchange Commission and the Justice Department are reportedly investigat­ing.

On Monday, GM said the new memorandum of understand­ing will help Nikola produce its commercial trucks, and GM to commercial­ize its fuel-cell technology. Spokesman Jim Cain said the revised agreement is more focused.

Nikola said Monday that its work on heavy trucks will continue. And GM will still be part of a global supply agreement that would integrate GM’S Hydrotec fuel-cell system into Nikola’s commercial semi-trucks.

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