Technology

EV startup Lordstown Motors files for bankruptcy

A mural is displayed on the wall outside the Lordstown Motors plant, June 22, 2021 in Lordstown, Ohio. Lordstown Motors Corp. says it is in danger of failing because Foxconn is looking to back away from an agreement to invest up to $170 million in the commercial electric vehicle startup. Lordstown said in a regulatory filing on Monday, May 1, 2023 that it received a letter from Foxconn Ventures on April 21 saying that the company was in breach of the investment agreement because it had received a delisting warning from the Nasdaq stock market. (AP Photo/David Dermer, file)

Lordstown Motors, a U.S.-based electric vehicle startup that launched with huge fanfare and financial backing five years ago, has filed for bankruptcy. 

In a statement on Tuesday, the company said it filed for Chapter 11 protection in a Delaware bankruptcy court in an attempt to find a potential buyer, and said it remained confident that a future owner could take its Endurance truck and “multiple EV variants and take the product to the next level.” 

Lordstown blamed its financial situation on Taiwanese tech giant Foxconn, which wavered on a $170 million earlier this year. And it filed a lawsuit against the company, called Hon Hai Precision Industry in Taiwan and China, for allegedly destroying its business.

“Despite our best efforts and earnest commitment to the partnership, Foxconn willfully and repeatedly failed to execute on the agreed-upon strategy, leaving us with Chapter 11 as the only viable option to maximize the value of Lordstown’s assets for the benefit of our stakeholders,” Lordstown CEO Edward Hightower said in a statement.

“We will vigorously pursue our litigation claims against Foxconn accordingly.”

The automaker also filed a series of customary “first day” motions to continue operating the business during the process, which it said it expected to have approved quickly.

Lordstown is named after the Ohio town where it is based, and where its Endurance truck model is manufactured at a former General Motors factory.

“We remain confident that an orderly, expedited sale process will maximize value for our stakeholders and enable the talent and technology behind the Endurance to find new and supportive ownership,” Hightower said in the statement. “While in Chapter 11, Lordstown will continue to support our customers.”

Lordstown in its lawsuit accused Foxconn of leveraging resources gained through the partnership to advance its own business interests.

In a statement to The Hill, a Foxconn spokesperson said the company had maintained a positive relationship in negotiations with Lordstown, saying the U.S. company was reluctant to carry out the terms of its investment agreement. Foxconn also said it was reserving the right to pursue its own legal action.

“Foxconn originally hoped to continue discussions and reach a solution that could satisfy all stakeholders, without resorting to baseless legal actions, but so far the two parties have yet to reach a consensus,” the spokesperson added.

Lordstown’s bankruptcy filing marks the latest hit for EV startups as Tesla and traditional auto industry giants have ramped up competition in the space.

— Updated at 5:36 p.m.