Vinfast’s inevitable slide down the rankings of most valuable car makers based on share price has already begun after the Vietnamese newcomer was briefly worth more than Porsche following its recent listing on the US Nasdaq stock exchange.
But how did this debt-ridden, loss-making start-up come to be worth a theoretical $160 billion in the first place? Is there anything about Vinfast’s future potential that suggests that this wasn’t just a replay of the EV stock-price bubble that gripped investors in 2021?
Vinfast was founded in 2017 by Vietnam’s richest individual, Pham Nhat Vuong, as part of his Vingroup empire and has undergone a dramatic journey since.
The company tapped knowledge and parts from both BMW and General Motors to launch a range of combustion-engined vehicles in Vietnam, only to cancel their production last year to concentrate instead on electric cars.
The EV switch was the trigger for the company’s global expansion, including to the US, where the VF 8 mid-size electric SUV has just gone on sale, and Europe, starting initially this year in France, Germany and the Netherlands.
Vinfast has pitched its all-SUV line-up as a near-premium alternative to more expensive rivals with a focus on digital connectivity.
It sought to leverage what it considered to be a market advantage to list on the US stock market, initially targeting a conventional IPO but moving to the easier SPAC method (taking over a pre-listed company set up by investors especially for that purpose).
Vinfast listed on 15 August on the tech-focused Nasdaq exchange with a self-calculated valuation of $23-25 billion – an ambitious target based on what it thought would be a near-equivalent, American firm Lucid.
Then came the extraordinary leap in share price. By 26 August, it was worth $160bn, based on a valuation that calculates the price of the floated shares and extrapolates that against the remainder of the company’s stock still held privately.
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