
California-based Lucid will supply technology, including battery systems, for cash and shares worth about US$232 million, Aston said in a statement.
The deal would make Lucid a minority shareholder with a stake of about 3.7%.
Saudi Arabia became Aston’s second biggest shareholder last year following a capital injection from its sovereign wealth fund.
The Saudi fund is also the biggest investor in Lucid Group.
Aston plans to offer customers electric options on all its vehicles from 2026, it said today.
News of the tie-up, subject to shareholder approval, sent Aston’s stock 10% higher to 360 pence on the rising London stock market.
Aston Martin, beloved by fictional British spy James Bond, suffered vast losses in 2019 on weak global demand linked to China’s economic slowdown and Brexit.
Losses then accelerated in the wake of the Covid pandemic.
The automaker was saved from bankruptcy in 2020 by Canadian billionaire Lawrence Stroll, its biggest investor.
Chinese car giant Geely last month became the third biggest shareholder in Aston Martin after a new cash injection.