Electric-vehicle startups and other green tech companies soared early last year. Now a wave of investigations, outside allegations and growing investor skepticism have sent shares down 75% or more for many of them.

Last week, investigations by boards of directors into top executives at two electric-vehicle makers led to management changes. A short seller alleged that a startup lithium producer’s technology doesn’t work. And an agriculture-technology company’s shares fell further after it wrote off most of the value of a recent acquisition.

Many of the companies went public through special-purpose acquisition companies, or SPACs, an alternative to traditional initial public offerings that allows companies to make lofty business projections. Some of the deals generated frenzied buying by small investors who are eager to invest in companies they believe will help reduce carbon emissions and limit climate change.

“You were getting complete silliness,” said Sam Peters, a portfolio manager at ClearBridge Investments who has avoided prerevenue electric-vehicle stocks.

Last Tuesday, delivery-van company Electric Last Mile Solutions Inc. ELMS -3.39% and electric-car maker Faraday Future Intelligent Electric Inc. FFIE 5.37% made leadership changes following recent investigations by their boards of directors.

At Electric Last Mile Solutions, Chief Executive James Taylor and Executive Chairman Jason Luo resigned after an investigation concluded both men purchased equity in the company at below market value around the company’s December 2020 SPAC merger. The company also said its financial statements might be inaccurate and would be restated. A company spokesman and Mr. Luo declined to comment on the allegations. Mr. Taylor didn’t respond to requests for comment. Shares fell more than 50% for the week to $2.28.

A board probe found that Faraday Future founder Jia Yueting, who stepped down as CEO in 2019, continued to play a more significant role at the company than had been represented to some investors.

Photo: jason lee/Reuters

Faraday Future said a board investigation determined that its claim to have 14,000 reservations for a vehicle may have been misleading. The company now describes nearly all of them as unpaid indications of interest. Faraday went public last year through a $3.4 billion SPAC deal and has struggled for years to launch a car. Shares have fallen 25% in the past month.

The probe also found that founder Jia Yueting, who stepped down as Faraday’s CEO in 2019, played a more significant role at the company than had been represented to some investors. Mr. Jia’s nephew, Jiawei Wang, has been suspended without pay from his role as vice president for global capital markets. Both men declined to comment through a company spokesman.

Both Mr. Jia, who will remain in his role at the company as chief product and user ecosystem officer, and CEO Carsten Breitfeld will take 25% salary reductions and report to a new executive chairperson, the company said.

The Securities and Exchange Commission has investigated several SPAC deals, including those that took electric-vehicle makers Nikola Corp. NKLA 4.20% and Lordstown Motors Corp. RIDE 5.73% public. Nikola late last year agreed to pay $125 million to settle a regulatory investigation into allegedly misleading statements by its founder and one-time executive chairman Trevor Milton.

Mr. Milton has been charged with three counts of fraud by the Justice Department. He has denied the allegations and pleaded not guilty.

On Thursday, the short seller that targeted Nikola and Lordstown, Hindenburg Research, alleged that new technology touted by an upstart lithium producer has yet to work, sending shares down 25%. Hindenburg echoed some of the claims about Standard Lithium Ltd. SLI 19.71% made by another short seller, Blue Orca Capital, late last year.

Faraday Future has struggled for years to launch a car.

Photo: steve marcus/Reuters

Short sellers aim to profit from stock-price declines by borrowing shares, selling them and then buying them back at lower prices.

Standard Lithium said in a release that some of Hindenburg’s allegations, such as that it has limited spending on research and development, were false and that it is still hoping to commercialize its technology with its German partner, chemicals company Lanxess AG LNXSY 5.40% . It previously called Blue Orca’s claims false. Standard Lithium shares rebounded 20% Friday.

In December, a unit of privately held conglomerate Koch Industries Inc. invested $100 million in Standard Lithium. A Koch spokeswoman said the firm conducted extensive due diligence before investing and is excited about Standard’s potential. Lanxess declined to comment.

Many startups aiming to produce metals for batteries face technological and environmental challenges. Shares of deep-sea mining startup The Metals Co. , formerly called DeepGreen, have plunged some 90% after its SPAC deal. Several analysts anticipate that environmental opposition to underwater mining will prevent it from producing any raw materials.

Money is a sticking point in climate-change negotiations around the world. As economists warn that limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius will cost many more trillions than anticipated, WSJ looks at how the funds could be spent, and who would pay. Illustration: Preston Jessee/WSJ

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Do you think the shares of clean tech companies can rebound? Join the conversation below.

The hurdles extend beyond the future of transportation. Shares of AppHarvest Inc. APPH -1.99% are down 90% in the past year. The decline accelerated after the indoor-farming company recently wrote down a large portion of its acquisition of artificial-intelligence company Root AI Inc.

Startups that have missed business targets have been among the market’s worst performers this year. “They’re going through the growing pains of being a public company,” said Brian Dobson, director of SPAC and disruptive technology equity research at Chardan Capital Markets.

When SPACs Attack

Write to Ben Foldy at [email protected] and Amrith Ramkumar at [email protected]

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This post first appeared on wsj.com

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