Home Lifestyle Auto Lucid cuts prices of electric sedans for limited time amid EV price wars The automaker slashed the price of its Air Touring model to $87,500 and the more powerful Grand Touring by $10,000 to $115,600 by Reuters November 5, 2023 Image courtesy: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images Lucid Group cut prices of its Air range of luxury sedans earlier this week for a limited time ahead of the holiday season, amid stiff competition and slowing demand for electric vehicles(EV). High interest rates have hit demand for EVs, and auto manufacturers, led by the world’s most valuable automaker Tesla, have responded by cutting prices. The Elon Musk-led automaker has cut sticker prices multiple times this year to fend off new lower-priced electric vehicles from eating into its depleting market share. The EV price war has forced companies to prioritise sales over margins and has brought down the average price of EVs to $50,683 in September, a report by Cox Automotive showed. Lucid cuts prices across models Lucid slashed the price of its Air Touring model to $87,500 from $95,000 and the more powerful Grand Touring by $10,000 to $115,600. The Newark, California-based company also slashed the price of its all-wheel drive Air Pure to $74,900 from $82,400. The price of its latest offering, the rear-wheel drive Air Pure, remains unchanged at $77,400. Tesla has cut the prices of its Model S premium sedan, Lucid Air’s closest competitor, to $74,990. Lucid had previously cut prices for its cars in August as the company burned through cash as it ramped up production in a tough economy. However, backing from Saudi Arabia‘s Public Investment Fund has given the company, which is set to report its third-quarter results on Tuesday, a liquidity boost over some of its other cash-crunched peers. The price cut offer will be valid till November 30, the company said. Read: Lucid opens Saudi Arabia’s first car production facility Tags Electric Car Lucid Public Investment Fund Saudi Arabia Tesla You might also like Trump’s policies may hit EMs, but Saudi stays safe: Citigroup Lenovo, world’s largest PC maker, to launch factory in Saudi Arabia Saudi-backed Pony AI seeks $4.5bn valuation in US IPO Apple faces $3.8bn legal claim over iCloud practices