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EV investor Ideanomics files for bankruptcy to sell possessions

Electric automobile tech company Ideanomics Inc. filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in Delaware on Wednesday to discover a buyer for its wireless charging business and other innovation investments.

Ideanomics got in insolvency with over $30 million in debt and simply $189,000 in cash on hand, according to files filed in Wilmington, Delaware personal bankruptcy court. Ideanomics said it has lost over $800 million in the previous five years.

The company spent $320 million on electric automobile innovation investments in between 2021 and 2023, but the majority of those investments were unprofitable.

It has actually closed down all of its obtained companies except the cordless charging business WAVE, and laid off all however 17 employees.

WAVE, which Ideanomics acquired in 2021, will continue to run during the insolvency, and its wireless charging technology is being utilized by the Antelope Valley Transit Authority in California, which serves commuters in the cities of Palmdale, Lancaster, and Northern Los Angeles County.

The WAVE system is constructed into paths on public roadways and parking facilities, and it is created to immediately charge buses throughout arranged stops, according to court documents.

Ideanomics has lined up an $11 million bankruptcy loan from Tillou Management and Consulting, an entity controlled by previous wrestling executive Vince McMahon. McMahon is wed to Linda McMahon, who U.S. President-elect Donald Trump has actually nominated as education secretary in his second administration.

Ideanomics plans to sell WAVE to Tillou unless another buyer actions in with a greater offer, according to court documents.

Ideanomics saw its stock rise to over $600 a share in 2021 as retail financier interest in electric vehicles surged. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission later on implicated the company of deceptive financiers by overemphasizing its monetary performance. Ideanomics' stock was de-listed from NASDAQ in July 2024, and it settled the SEC suit in August.

Before its pivot to electrical lorries, Ideanomics operated in unrelated markets, providing video-on-demand services in China and later providing monetary technology used for trading in petroleum and electronic elements.

(source: Reuters)