A merger between Chinese EV maker Aiways and SPAC Hudson Acquisition would ring in a $400 million valuation

Chinese electric vehicle maker Aiways will go public via a merger with U.S. special purpose acquisition company Hudson Acquisition Corp in a deal that should value the company around $400 million, the two companies said.

The deal is a lifeline for Aiways, which halted production at its Shangrao plant last summer as a fierce EV price war in China squeezed automakers’ margins. The company is among a group of struggling Chinese EV startups including WM Motors and Human Horizons that have suspended operations amid sluggish sales.

The SPAC merger should close by the end of the year, the companies said.

Prior to its current financial struggles, Aiways had been selling its U5 and U6 electric models in 16 European markets, meaning it has existing products and operations where it is ready to go, though scaling up production is expensive.

The plant in Shangrao has the capacity to build 300,000 EVs annually.

Aiways had been in talks with investors for months on restarting production of its existing models and developing a new, affordable car as an export-only brand focused on Europe in the short term.

“The new entity will be strategically positioned to capitalize on our vision and resources in the European EV market,” Alexander Klose, managing director of Aiways Europe said in a statement issued late on Tuesday evening.

Aiways will be headquartered in Europe to handle sales, marketing, finance, while manufacturing, procurement and research and development will mostly be handled in China, according to a source familiar with the automaker’s plans who was not permitted to discuss them publicly.

The announcement comes just days after Chinese EV maker Zeekr, a unit of, saw its shares rise almost 35% above their initial public offering price in a strong start for the first major U.S. market debut by a China-based company since 2021.

Founded in 2017, Aiways’ investors include tech giant Tencent, ride-hailing group DiDi and battery maker CATL, which will remain shareholders, according to a source familiar with the matter.

—Nick Carey, Reuters

https://www.fastcompany.com/91125687/merger-between-chinese-ev-maker-aiways-spac-hudson-acquisition-would-ring-400-million-valuation?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Creato 1y | 15 mag 2024, 16:50:08


Accedi per aggiungere un commento

Altri post in questo gruppo

This Florida company’s imaging tool helps speed up natural disaster recovery efforts

It has, to date, been a calm hurricane season in the state of Florida, but any resident of the Southeast will tell you that the deeper into summer we go, the more dangerous it becomes.

T

25 lug 2025, 19:50:03 | Fast company - tech
TikTok reacts to alleged shoplifter detained after 7 hours in Illinois Target

TikTok has become obsessed with an alleged shoplifter who spent seven straight hou

25 lug 2025, 15:10:09 | Fast company - tech
Is it safe to install iOS 26 on older iPhones like the 11 and SE?

Apple says the upcoming iOS 26, expected in a polished “release” version in September, will support devices back to the iPhone 11 from September 2019 and second-generation iPhone SE from April 202

25 lug 2025, 15:10:08 | Fast company - tech
‘Democratizing space’ requires addressing questions of sustainability and sovereignty

India is on the moon,” S. Somanath, chairman of the Indian Space Research Organization, announced in

25 lug 2025, 10:30:06 | Fast company - tech
iPadOS 26 is way more Mac-like. Where does that lead?

Greetings, everyone, and welcome back to Fast Company’s Plugged In.

It was one of the best-received pieces of Apple news I can recall. At the company’s

25 lug 2025, 08:20:03 | Fast company - tech
Elon Musk says he’s bringing back Vine in AI form. Here’s what that could mean

Good news: Vine might be coming back. Bad news: in AI form, courtesy o

24 lug 2025, 22:50:08 | Fast company - tech
Apple’s iOS 26 public beta is out. Here’s how to install it safely

A stable “release” version of Apple’s iOS 26 is due in September, but you can now try an in-progress version, called the public beta. It previews a revamped interface and new fea

24 lug 2025, 20:40:06 | Fast company - tech