On September 10,Watch The Fourth Body Online Chinese electric vehicle manufacturer WM Motor announced the voluntary termination of its RTO (Reverse Takeover) process with Apollo Future Mobility Group (AFMG) on the Hong Kong Stock Exchanges and Clearing. The move means that WM Motor’s plans to go public through a back-door listing have fallen through, according to Chinese news outlet Caixin. In January this year, the Hong Kong listed AFMG said it planned to acquire a WM Motor subsidiary for approximately $2.02 billion. Following the acquisition, WM Motor would have held 31.1 billion shares of AFMG, representing a 68.26% ownership stake. Industry insiders saw this move as an ambitious attempt by WM Motor to go public in Hong Kong by making AFMG its shell company. WM Motor was once a leading electric vehicle startup in the Chinese market. In 2019, it ranked second among electric vehicle startups with an annual delivery volume of 16,876 units. In 2020, WM Motor delivered 22,495 vehicles, ranking fourth among EV startups including Nio, Xpeng, and others. In 2021, the firm slipped to fifth, delivering 44,157 vehicles. In 2022, WM Motor’s deliveries dropped significantly to 29,450 vehicles, representing a year-on-year decrease of 33.3%. [Caixin, in Chinese]
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Staff Picks: Bathtub Reading, Germaine Tailleferre by The Paris Review
India's only active volcano is back from the dead after 150 years
14 times footballers were unintentionally hilarious on Twitter
14 times footballers were unintentionally hilarious on Twitter
Talking Dirty with Our Fall Issue by Sadie Stein
'The Great Wall' is a hit, just not in the U.S.
Worried about your Facebook data? You might want to try these tools
Twitter can't get over this English cricketer who was sold for $2 million at the IPL auctions
Charles Hardin Holly; Clovis, New Mexico; May 27, 1957 by John Jeremiah Sullivan
Chinese companies are torching trash off power lines with flame
Staff Picks: Harriet the Spy, Happy Fourth of July! by The Paris Review
Trump thinks something terrible happened in Sweden, so here come the IKEA and ABBA jokes
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。