Is Lucid Stock a Buy Ahead of 1-for-10 Reverse Stock Split?

The Motley Fool

Electric vehicle maker Lucid Group (LCID +0.00%) is about to execute a reverse stock split, in which it will exchange 10 of its existing shares for one new share. The expectation is that the new shares will trade at 10 times the old shares’ price, as they will represent the same ownership stake in the company.

Lucid’s planned reverse split will take effect after the market closes on Friday. Here are the details, a look at why Lucid is doing this, and some thoughts on the big question: Will be this be a bullish catalyst for the long-suffering electric vehicle stock?

Lucid is currently scaling up production of its Gravity luxury SUV. It expects sales volumes to jump in the second half of 2025. Image source: Lucid Group.

Reverse stock splits aren’t always bullish, but Lucid’s might be

Reverse stock splits aren’t generally bullish. They’re typically performed by companies whose share prices have declined sharply, often to ensure that their shares remain listed with stock exchanges that require a minimum stock price of $1.00.

Lucid isn’t quite in that territory yet. As I write this on Thursday, Lucid’s shares are trading a bit over $2. But its board of directors recommended a reverse split anyway, and it was approved by shareholders earlier this month.

Why is Lucid doing this? Here’s what it said in its regulatory filing ahead of that shareholder vote:

“The Board believes that a reduction in the number of outstanding shares, coupled with an increase in the per share price, would enhance the market perception of our common stock, particularly among institutional investors and other sophisticated market participants.”

The filing explained that “because of the trading volatility often associated with low-priced stocks,” many institutional investors and brokerage firms have internal policies that restrict their ability to buy low-priced stocks or to recommend them to their clients.

In recommending that shareholders vote for the reverse split, Lucid’s board argued that raising the price of its stock via the reverse split will help the company access capital markets — or put another way, it’ll help ensure that big investors and Wall Street analysts are able to buy and recommend Lucid’s shares.

How Lucid’s reverse stock split will work

Investors holding Lucid’s shares as of market close on Friday won’t need to do anything to participate in the reverse split. As of 5 pm Eastern time on Friday Aug. 28, after the U.S. markets are closed, every 10 Lucid shares will be exchanged automatically for one new share.