Polestar once sounded like a can’t-miss formula. Take Volvo’s Scandinavian sensibility, strip away the boxiness, add a dash of performance, and wrap it in minimalist design. For a while, it worked. The brand carved out a niche as the thinking driver’s EV—something between Tesla’s chaos and Porsche’s precision.
But lately, the glow around Polestar has dimmed. The company announced this week that it’s received a delisting warning from Nasdaq after its share price slipped below the $1.00 minimum bid requirement. The stock closed at $0.84, brushing uncomfortably close to its 52-week low of $0.82 and far from its $1.42 high.
The warning doesn’t mean Polestar is immediately out of the game. The automaker has until April 29 to get its share price above $1 for at least ten consecutive trading days. If that doesn’t happen, Nasdaq could grant another 180-day extension—but that’s more a stay of execution than a cure.
Momentum in the Metal, Not on the Market
The irony is that Polestar’s product lineup is stronger than ever. Third-quarter retail sales jumped 13 percent to 14,192 units, and year-to-date sales are up 36 percent to 44,482 vehicles. Those aren’t Tesla numbers, but for a brand that sells design-led performance EVs rather than volume boxes, it’s respectable growth.
At the Munich Motor Show, Polestar finally pulled the covers off the production Polestar 5—a sleek four-door GT aimed squarely at the Porsche Taycan. It’s a stunner, both in looks and numbers: a 112-kWh battery, dual motors, and up to 872 horsepower (650 kW). That’s supercar-level thrust, wrapped in Swedish understatement.
And earlier this month, the company showed off a heavily revised Polestar 3, now boasting an 800-volt electrical architecture, improved batteries, and stronger, more efficient motors. Faster charging, better range, and more punch—exactly what a luxury EV crossover needs to stay relevant.
A Brand at a Crossroads
Polestar’s lineup suggests it’s heading in the right direction; its stock chart says otherwise. Investors remain wary, perhaps spooked by the company’s slow ramp-up, high R&D costs, and dependence on Geely-Volvo infrastructure.
Still, it’s too early to write Polestar’s obituary. The brand has a clear identity and increasingly capable cars. But as the EV market shifts from hype to hard economics, Polestar will need to prove it can be more than a design darling—it has to be a business success too.
If the company can bring its financials up to the same level as its engineering, the stock might shine again. If not, this bright Scandinavian star risks flickering out before it ever truly blazes.
Source: Polestar