Lucid Group (LCID) shares dropped over 7% Monday morning after Morgan Stanley delivered a brutal reality check to investors. The firm downgraded the luxury electric vehicle maker to Underweight from Equal Weight, with analyst Andrew Percoco slashing the price target from $30 to just $10.
The Long Road Ahead
Here's the problem: Making electric vehicles is expensive, and making luxury electric vehicles profitably is even harder. Morgan Stanley now believes Lucid won't reach gross profit breakeven until 2028. That's three years away just to get to zero on the most basic profitability metric. Operating profit? Try 2031, according to the firm's projections.
Sure, Lucid has some genuine advantages. The analyst acknowledged the company's premium pricing power and industry-leading battery efficiency as structural strengths. But when you're burning cash and profitability is nearly a decade away, those positives start to feel less impressive.
The Dilution Problem
Here's where things get uncomfortable for current shareholders. Percoco estimates Lucid will need to raise approximately $2 billion in equity by the second half of 2026 to keep the lights on. When your entire market cap is only about $4.6 billion, raising $2 billion means serious dilution risk for anyone holding shares today.
This isn't exactly news investors wanted to hear. The stock is already down roughly 58% year-to-date, battered by a wider-than-expected third-quarter loss, the departure of key executives including Senior VP of Product Eric Bach, and an $875 million convertible note offering that already had investors worried about dilution.
Trading Near the Bottom
Lucid shares were trading at $12.47 Monday, down 7.08% on the session. The stock's 52-week range spans from $11.46 to $36.39, and it's currently hovering near the lower end of that range. That might look tempting to bargain hunters, but the recent price action raises serious questions about whether the stock can reclaim higher ground anytime soon.
Adding to the volatility: short interest sits near 50% of the float. That's an enormous amount of bearish positioning, which can create wild swings in either direction.
According to market data, Lucid currently carries a Momentum score of 8.72, with price trends across short, medium, and long-term horizons all negative. Translation: the technical picture isn't offering much encouragement either.
For a company trying to compete in the brutally competitive luxury EV space, Morgan Stanley's downgrade underscores just how difficult the path forward has become.