Posts: 268
Joined: Oct 2018
Oregon
08-20-2019, 03:45 AM
(This post was last modified: 08-20-2019, 03:46 AM by harriska2.)
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On the Meet the Evergreen page it says Price, options, and specifications are subject to change.
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08-20-2019, 05:51 AM
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I hope when price, options, and specifications do change, it’s for the better, favors everyone involved, and at some point soon locks in and delivers.
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09-09-2019, 10:43 PM
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Can anyone explain to me in simple and understandable terms what the Class Action lawsuit is all about?
Did Arcimoto agree to a settlement? I hope this does not mean bankruptcy.
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09-10-2019, 06:21 AM
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Long story short, from my "I am not a lawyer, but I've dealt with many of them and dealt with many class action lawsuits" perspective:
The lawsuit claims that in the lead-up to the IPO, Arcimoto mis-stated how ready they were for production, concealing material deficiencies that they knew would significantly delay production of the vehicle. (Ironically, when the lawsuit was filed in March 2018, this wasn't very obvious. But it's rather painfully obvious now. Of course, the question at hand is "did Arcimoto know it was going to be this delayed?") The harm is that people bought the stock at IPO pricing assuming the estimate for production of "early 2018" was accurate, then the stock tanked when it became clear that was not tenable.
The reason is going out now is that a tentative settlement has been reached. Presumably Arcimoto would not agree to a settlement that would cause them to go out of business, and presumably those suing wouldn't want that either, as it would turn their shares COMPLETELY worthless.
The actual judge hearing about the settlement isn't until next January. That's when a judge will decide if this settlement is fair to all parties, and put it in force. Most class action settlements are approved by the judges. At "worst," the judge would say that the lawyers are asking for too much money and drop their fee slightly. It is exceedingly rare that a judge either declines the settlement, forcing it to actually go to trial; or significantly modifies the terms of the settlement (has the defendant pay far less or far more) when the settlement was agreed to by both parties.
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