The Mercury News

SEC examining Nikola over fraud allegation­s

- By Matt Robinson and Ed Ludlow

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is examining Nikola to assess the merits of a short-seller’s allegation­s that the electric-truck maker deceived investors about its business prospects, according to people familiar with the matter.

In a report last week that has captured Wall Street’s attention, Hindenburg Research called Nikola an “intricate fraud” that, among other allegation­s, overstated the capabiliti­es of its earliest test trucks. Nikola has pushed back, accusing the short seller of making misleading statements that were designed to manipulate its shares.

The tussle has prompted the SEC to examine Hindenburg’s claims to determine whether Nikola may have violated securities laws, said the people who asked not to be named because the inquiry isn’t public. The regulator’s review is preliminar­y and may not lead to allegation­s of wrongdoing.

Shares fell as much as 11.7% in postmarket trading Monday, wiping out its earlier gain at the market’s close.

Nikola has encouraged the SEC to get involved. As its stock tumbled last week after the release of the short seller report, the Phoenix-based company said it reached out to the SEC to discuss its issues with the Hindenburg report, and ultimately held a call with agency officials on the morning of Sept. 11. Nikola says Hindenburg is attempting to profit from a “manufactur­ed decline” in its share price.

“Nikola has contacted and briefed the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission regarding Nikola’s concerns pertaining to the Hindenburg report,” the company said in a Monday statement. “Nikola intends to fully cooperate with the SEC regarding its inquiry into these matters.”

SEC spokeswoma­n Judith Burns declined to comment.

Hindenburg Founder Nathan Anderson said in a statement that he’s “encouraged that regulators are examining the situation.”

Hindenburg has a short position in Nikola shares and stands to benefit if the shares fall.

Among Hindenburg’s accusation­s is that a 2018 promotiona­l video was misleading because it gave the impression that a proto

type was capable of being driven when the truck had in fact been rolled down a hill.

Nikola said Monday it never claimed the truck

was driving under its own propulsion — though it had described the vehicle as “in motion” in social media posts and other communicat­ions.

Nikola was little-known before it went public earlier this year through a reverse merger with a blank-check company. The company

has recorded no meaningful revenue to date, yet its shares rose to almost $80 a share in June, giving it a market valuation greater than Ford Motor Co.’s. After the short seller report came out, shares of Nikola wiped out all the gains since going public.

Nikola plans to start

production of a batteryele­ctric semi truck in Ulm, Germany, in a joint venture with CNH Industrial’s Iveco unit by the end of 2021. It also has a factory under constructi­on in Coolidge, Arizona, where it hopes to begin mass production of fuel-cell semi trucks by 2023. However,

it has yet to build any products.

Last week, General Motors Co. made a surprise announceme­nt that it would take a $2 billion equity stake in Nikola. The deal committed GM to manufactur­ing the startup’s debut electric pickup, called the Badger.

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