Rising Star

Image source: Wallem Media - Shutterstock

What's going on?

Polestar announced plans to list on the stock market via a SPAC on Monday, in a deal thatll value the Swedish electric vehicle (EV) maker at $20 billion.

What does this mean?

EV-makers have been the talk of the town for the last year or so, and special purpose acquisition companies (SPACs) listed shell companies that merge with unlisted companies to fast-track their arrival on the stock market have been happy to jump on that battery-powered bandwagon. The latest comes courtesy of Volvo-spinoff Polestar, whose $20 billion valuation makes it one of the most valuable EV-makers to list via a SPAC. Itll also add another $1 billion to the companys war chest, which its planning to use to bump up production, introduce a new model to its line-up, and boost its reach from 14 countries to 30 by the end of 2023.

Why should I care?

For markets: Polestar tops Tesla.
EV-maker valuations have been hitting dizzy heights across the board as the green revolution really starts to bite, and Polestars is no different: this deal values the company at more than 12x this years forecasted sales (tweet this). Its still lower than Teslas 15x, mind you, and Polestars sales growth is in a more promising place too: its revenue is expected to double next year, while Teslas is only expected to climb 37%.

Zooming out: Make chips, not war.
Polestar does have at least one big hurdle to overcome in the immediate future: ongoing chip shortages, which one consultancy thinks means 14.5 million fewer vehicles both EV and traditional will be built between now and 2023. Still, Teslas pointed out that chipmakers are going to a lot of effort to build more, which should help improve availability in the sector as soon as next year.

Originally posted as part of the Finimize daily email.

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