Lucid’s Elevator Exec Gambit: Silvio Napoli Takes Wheel as Saudi Cash and Uber Bets Pile On

Lucid Group named Silvio Napoli, ex-Schindler CEO, as permanent leader after 14 months, securing over $1 billion in funding from PIF and Uber amid Q1 losses near $1 billion. Winterhoff shifts to COO as robotaxi and midsize EV plans accelerate.
Lucid’s Elevator Exec Gambit: Silvio Napoli Takes Wheel as Saudi Cash and Uber Bets Pile On
Written by Eric Hastings

Lucid Group ended a 14-month CEO hunt on April 14, 2026, tapping Silvio Napoli, the former chairman and CEO of Swiss elevator giant Schindler Group, to steer the luxury EV maker through its deepening cash burn and production ramps. Shares of LCID tumbled 6% that day, closing near $7.50 amid disclosures of a first-quarter operating loss projected between $985 million and $1 billion. Napoli, who spent nearly 31 years at Schindler modernizing supply chains and pushing into Asia, steps in after interim chief Marc Winterhoff—who took over when founder Peter Rawlinson resigned as CEO in February 2025—returns to his COO post. Turqi Alnowaiser, Lucid’s board chairman, praised the pick. “Silvio is a proven global leader with deep experience leading complex, technology-driven organizations through periods of rapid growth and operational scaling,” Alnowaiser said in the company’s press release.

Winterhoff gets credit for steadying the ship. Under him, Lucid rolled out the Gravity SUV despite early quality hiccups, sharpened strategy, and inked a robotaxi deal with Uber. “The past year has been an important period of progress for Lucid, and I’m proud of the work the team has done to strengthen our operations and execution,” Winterhoff said. He now shifts focus to day-to-day operations as Napoli relocates from Switzerland—pending U.S. work visa approval—to join the board and lead full-time.

But cash is king. Lucid burned through about $3 billion last year, with $4.6 billion in liquidity left to last into mid-2027. Help arrived alongside the CEO news: over $1 billion in fresh commitments. Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund affiliate Ayar Third Investment pledged $550 million in convertible preferred stock. Uber kicked in $200 million more, on top of its prior $300 million, and committed to buying at least 35,000 Lucid vehicles—including Gravity SUVs and upcoming midsize models—for its global robotaxi fleet with Nuro’s Level 4 autonomy. A $300 million public stock offering rounded it out, pricing amid the Q1 loss reveal. “Today’s announcement demonstrates the growing strength of our relationship with Uber, our continued partnership with the PIF, and the benefits our software-defined EV platforms bring to next-generation mobility networks,” Winterhoff noted in comments to Electrek. Test drives of Gravity robotaxis started for Uber staff this week.

Napoli’s outsider status raises eyebrows in Detroit circles. No auto pedigree. Instead, decades scaling Schindler’s global manufacturing, enforcing cost discipline, and blending tech with service—skills Lucid craves as it eyes profitability. He serves on Eaton Corp.’s board too, a power-management firm. The board bets his capital allocation savvy will fix Lucid’s gross margins, stuck in negative territory. Q1 production hit 5,500 vehicles, deliveries 3,093—hampered by a 29-day snag now resolved—with full-year guidance at 25,000-27,000. Yahoo Finance flagged the Gravity and Air scaling, plus a midsize platform under $50,000 launching later this year: Cosmos SUV this summer on a lighter Atlas powertrain, followed by Earth and off-road variants sharing 95% parts.

Saudi backing remains Lucid’s lifeline. PIF, its largest shareholder, keeps pouring in despite EV demand slumps. Yet Wall Street yawns. LCID shed 67% over 12 months, hit record lows. The Wall Street Journal tied the funding to robotaxi expansion, but shares reflect doubts on execution. Automotive News called Napoli an ‘outsider’ for the ‘struggling EV maker,’ with PIF’s $550 million and Uber’s $200 million shoring up the $750 million core infusion. CNBC highlighted his non-auto roots versus Rawlinson and Winterhoff’s industry chops.

Rawlinson’s exit? Abrupt. He stays CTO, split focus between engineering and running the show spelled trouble. Napoli inherits Gravity ramp-up—despite fits and starts—and Air sedan tweaks for volume. Robotaxi prototype debuted at CES January 2026; Lunar two-seater concept followed at March Investor Day. Midsize push targets mass-market affordability. But Q1 deliveries lagged. Operating losses match Q4’s $1 billion. Full earnings drop May 5.

Investors split on X. Some cheer continuity with Winterhoff at COO. Others question elevator-to-EV leap. “That new CEO’s background doesn’t look like he will be taking any risks, which Lucid needs,” one user posted. Stock dipped further post-news, sympathy plays fizzling. Car and Driver profiles Napoli’s manufacturing edge for Lucid’s service model. WardsAuto notes the 14-month void filled at last.

Lucid’s path? Napoli must translate Schindler-scale ops to EVs. PIF won’t let it fold—Saudi plant expands. Uber deal scales autonomy revenue. But margins must flip. Production doubles needed. Losses shrink. Or liquidity dries. Bold hire. High stakes. Watch May earnings.

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