Electric vehicle companies experienced a drop in stock prices on Monday after the supposed ineffectiveness of the President’s “Build Back Better” plan, which claims vital incentives for the growing industry.
On Monday, the stocks of big EV start-ups like Faraday Future, Nikola, and Lordstown Motors all fell over 7%.
Ravian Automotive, a newly public EV company, also hit a new low stock price of $88.40.
Automakers such as General Motors and Tesla – both of which would have been under Build Back Better but no longer qualify for electric vehicle tax credits – also tumbled during the trading period.
Joe Biden’s plan offers up to $12,500 per vehicle in EV incentives, which has been viewed as crucial in driving more sales of EVs, which cost far more than conventional internal combustion engine (ICE) cars.
Transportation officials are considering the Build Back Better bill and the new infrastructure package as critical parts of Biden’s plan to help achieve EV sales ambition.
Biden said he wants roughly half of all vehicles sold by 2030 to be electric. That would include plug-in hybrid EVs with EV batteries and traditional ICPs.
Biden’s bipartisan infrastructure bill allocated $7.5 billion for EV chargers. But Wall Street had cast more doubt on Build Back Better incentives, which have now become doubtful.
Joe Manchin, the Democratic Senator of West Virginia, effectively condemned the bill on Sunday, stating he would not give a vote of favour in the 50-50 Senate.
The Build Back Better allocated an EV incentive of $7500 tax credit to buy a plug-in-electric car and $500 if the car’s battery is manufactured in the United States. An extra $4,500 tax credit will be given if the car is assembled locally with union labour. This has ignited severe criticism from non-Detroit car manufacturers whose U.S. workers are not organized.
Here, you can examine various EV companies, including Tesla and legacy automakers Ford Motor and GM, which have claimed heavy investments in electric cars. The electric vehicle companies experienced a drop in stock prices on Monday after the supposed ineffectiveness of the President’s “Build Back Better” plan, which claims vital incentives for the growing industry.