Oct 31 (Reuters) - Polestar said on Friday it
was notified by the Nasdaq for not meeting the exchange's
listing rules related to maintaining a minimum bid price of $1,
as the Swedish EV firm's shares fall pressured by intensifying
competition.
Polestar has rolled out discounts and leasing incentives to
boost EV sales, but faces larger rivals such as Tesla
and BYD, with Wall Street cautious about its growth
potential despite strong demand from its home market of Europe.
Its U.S.-listed shares closed at 84 cents on Friday and have
lost about 20% of their value this year after dropping over 50%
last year.
Nasdaq's notice indicates the company has 180 days, or until
April 29, 2026, to regain compliance by having the closing price
of the U.S.-listed shares meet or exceed $1 per share for at
least ten consecutive business days, Polestar said.
If Polestar does not gain compliance by then, it may get an
additional 180-day extension, the company said.
This marks Polestar's second tryst with Nasdaq
non-compliance, after it faced a potential delisting last year
due to its inability to file its annual report with the U.S.
securities regulator in a timely manner.