Mullen vows to ‘take action’ against illegal short sellers, and stock bounces

Shares of Mullen Automotive Inc. bounced Wednesday, after the electric-vehicle maker said he retained a law firm to help him combat illegal naked short-selling activities.

The stock MULN,
+5.75%
bounced 2.9% in morning trading, after falling 6.3% on Monday to close at a record low of 10.1 cents. It suffered a record 85.2% monthly plunge in June, even after the company reported last week that it recorded revenue for the first time and that it was in the “best financial position” in its history.

On Wednesday, the Brea, Calif.-based company said it retained Christian Attar, formally known as Christian Levine Law Group, in partnership with Warshaw, Burstein LLP, to combat naked short selling, which is an illegal way of taking bearish bets against a stock.

Based on reports received from share-tracking company Shareholder Intelligence Services LLC, or ShareIntel, Mullen believes its stock may have been the target of a market-manipulation scheme — naked short selling — and has taken action to expose any potential wrongdoing.

The company noted that Christian Attar has prosecuted and collected “millions of dollars” in total damages on behalf of clients from those who have been involved in market manipulation schemes.

“Since our announcement on April 28, we have been actively investigating naked short selling and we now have enough intel to have the law firm actively investigate and, where justified, take action against any market manipulators using naked short selling, spoofing or other illegal acts ,” said Chief Executive Officer David Michery.

The stock has plummeted 95.9% over the past three months, while the Global X Autonomous and Electric Vehicles exchange-traded fund DRIV,
-0.42%
has rallied 15.2% and the S&P 500 SPX,
-0.15%
has advanced 8.7%.