The Wall Street Journal

Lordstown Motors looks to reset its course a day after CEO’s exit

Executives say there is plenty of interest in its all-electric truck and production is on track to start in September

Lordstown Motors’ two top leaders resigned unexpectedly after a board committee found inaccuracies in the way it discloses preorders for its forthcoming truck.

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Executives at troubled electric-truck startup Lordstown Motors Corp. said Tuesday that the company has enough interest from potential buyers to sustain factory output through the end of 2022 and remains on track to start limited production in September.

“It’s a new day at Lordstown and there are no disruptions—and will be no disruptions—to our day-to-day,” said Angela Strand, who took over Monday as the company’s executive chairwoman, after the chief executive and chief financial officer stepped down from the company. Ms. Strand and two other executives spoke at a Tuesday webinar for reporters.

The two top leaders resigned unexpectedly after a board committee found inaccuracies in the way the company discloses preorders for its forthcoming all-electric truck.

The Ohio-based startup is one of several electric-vehicle challengers to have whipsawed in a matter of months from being Wall Street darlings to the target of short sellers, financial regulators and critics questioning their longer-term viability.

An expanded version of this article appears on WSJ.com.

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