The Securities and Change Fee has closed its investigation into electrical automobile startup Faraday Future, regardless of SEC workers on the case recommending an enforcement motion final 12 months, TechCrunch has discovered.
4 sources conversant in the investigation, who have been granted anonymity to discuss the federal government case, instructed TechCrunch that the SEC knowledgeable the corporate and other people concerned within the probe concerning the closure this previous week.
The dismissal of the case comes amid a historic drop in enforcement actions by the SEC, which solely initiated 4 instances towards publicly-traded firms in its 2025 fiscal 12 months, a current report reveals. The SEC didn’t reply to an after-hours request for remark.
The investigation into Faraday Future lasted for practically 4 years. The SEC was whether or not the EV startup made “false and deceptive statements” when it went public in a 2021 merger with a particular objective acquisition firm (SPAC), and was additionally probing whether or not Faraday Future faked the gross sales of its first electrical automobiles in 2023 — a declare that’s been made by at the least three former worker whistleblowers.
The monetary regulator despatched the startup a number of subpoenas, regulatory filings from Faraday Future present. The SEC additionally took depositions of a number of former staff and executives in 2024 and 2025, three of the individuals conversant in the case have instructed TechCrunch.
In July 2025, Faraday Future revealed the SEC had despatched the corporate and a number of executives — together with founder Jia Yueting — letters referred to as “Wells Notices.” The SEC sends Wells Notices when workers working a case have determined to advocate the company take enforcement motion.
It’s not clear if Faraday Future ever responded to the Wells Notices despatched final 12 months. As lately as February, the corporate disclosed in regulatory filings that it had not. “The Firm and executives plan to interact with the SEC to clarify why enforcement motion isn’t warranted,” Faraday Future wrote in such a submitting final month. An organization spokesperson stated Sunday that Faraday Future would share extra data later Sunday.
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The Division of Justice additionally sent Faraday Future requests for data after the SEC opened its investigation in 2022. Faraday Future has referred to this as an “investigation” in regulatory filings; the DOJ has by no means confirmed if it opened a full probe, and it didn’t reply to an after-hours request for remark.
It’s uncommon for the SEC to not pursue an enforcement motion after sending a Wells Discover. One research finished on the Wharton Faculty in 2020 confirmed that around 85% of targets who obtain a Wells Discover wind up in court docket with the SEC.
The SEC investigated practically each electrical automobile startup that went public in a SPAC merger over the past six years. In nearly all of these instances, the company reached a settlement with the startups. It dismissed an investigation into Lucid Motors in 2023, and as TechCrunch first reported in February, the SEC ended a probe into bankrupt EV startup Fisker late final 12 months.
Origins of the investigation
Faraday Future was based in California in 2014 by Jia, a businessman who on the time was operating a booming tech conglomerate in China referred to as LeEco. It was one in every of many new firms making an attempt to turn into the “subsequent Tesla” or, optimistically, a “Tesla killer.”
Faraday snapped up expertise from Tesla, different automakers, and likewise tech firms like Apple, and at one level employed as many as round 1,400 staff. However issues obtained bumpy rapidly. The corporate turned heads, in each good and dangerous methods, on the 2016 Client Electronics Present, with a flashy idea automotive and the lofty aim of being as disruptive as the iPhone.
The corporate revealed its first automobile the next 12 months: a luxurious electrical SUV known as the FF91. By the top of 2017, although the corporate was practically out of money and had laid off or furloughed hundreds of workers. Jia’s firm in China had collapsed, and he self-exiled to California as the federal government in his dwelling nation positioned him on a debtor blacklist. (It was right now {that a} shut enterprise affiliate to Jeffrey Epstein pitched the intercourse felony on investing in Faraday Future, in addition to different EV startups, as TechCrunch lately revealed. Epstein by no means invested.)
Faraday Future was rescued by an investment from main Chinese language actual property conglomerate Evergrande. However that relationship fell aside rapidly, too, with Evergrande walking away by the end of 2018 and Faraday Future shedding much more staff.
Jia nominally stepped apart as CEO in 2019 and likewise filed for personal bankruptcy to settle billions of {dollars} of LeEco debt he had personally assured. However behind the scenes, he was nonetheless largely in charge of the company.
This grew to become a problem when Faraday Future went public in 2021 and raised about $1 billion. Members of the newly-appointed public firm board believed that Faraday’s executives had misrepresented Jia’s management over the day-to-day operations — particularly after a brief vendor report was revealed that scrutinized Faraday Future — and fashioned a particular committee to research.
That committee employed an outdoor regulation agency and a forensic accounting agency, and inside the first few months it began reporting its findings on to the SEC, the three individuals conversant in the investigation instructed TechCrunch.
Between January and April 2022, Jia was sidelined because of the board’s investigation, a senior VP named Matthias Aydt (who’s now co-CEO with Jia) was positioned on probation for six months, and one other VP named Jerry Wang (who’s Jia’s nephew) was suspended. (Wang finally resigned after “failure to cooperate with the investigation,” in accordance with firm filings, however is now again with Faraday Future.)
The committee’s work additionally confirmed that Faraday Future had, within the two years earlier than it went public, survived partly on multi-million-dollar loans made to the corporate by low-level staff with connections to Jia — referred to as “associated get together transactions” in authorized parlance.
On March 31, 2022, Faraday Future disclosed that the SEC had opened its investigation. The startup revealed the requests for data from the DOJ in June.
Dodging one other bullet
By way of the remainder of 2022, and amid the early phases of the SEC investigation, staff and other people near Jia waged a marketing campaign to regain management of the board and his firm. This ultimately resulted in dying threats towards some administrators, who ultimately resigned, paving the way in which for individuals near Jia to run the corporate as soon as extra.
Faraday Future lastly delivered the primary few FF91 SUVs in early 2023. Former staff have sued the corporate alleging that these weren’t true gross sales, and that the corporate had misled traders. The SEC investigators working the case subpoenaed Faraday Future about points associated to those gross sales, filings present.
Former executives and staff have been initially deposed by the SEC in 2024, in accordance with the individuals conversant in the investigation. The SEC sat a few of them for longer depositions within the first half of 2025, the individuals stated.
The Wells Discover despatched in July 2025 stated SEC workers had made “a preliminary dedication to advocate that the Fee file an enforcement motion towards the Firm alleging violations of varied anti-fraud provisions of the federal securities legal guidelines.”
Particularly, the Wells Discover referenced “purported false or deceptive statements” made through the SPAC merger course of about “associated get together transactions” and Jia’s “function within the Firm.” Jia, his nephew Wang, and two different unnamed staff additionally obtained Wells Notices.
Faraday Future remains to be making an attempt to promote the FF91, however it has additionally lately modified its enterprise in just a few methods. The corporate is importing extra inexpensive hybrid and electrical vans from China. It additionally seems to be promoting re-badged versions of Chinese robots, and turned a publicly-traded biotechnology firm into a firm focused on crypto.
These efforts haven’t stopped the corporate’s struggles. On Friday, the corporate introduced it had obtained a warning from the Nasdaq that its inventory worth was under the minimum of $1, which may ultimately result in the corporate being de-listed.
