Lucid was confirmed as a constituent of the small-cap Russell 2000 Index in FTSE Russell’s June reconstitution, the larger of the two annual reshuffles of US equity benchmarks that the index provider now runs after moving to a semi-annual schedule in 2026.
FTSE Russell sorts companies into the large-cap Russell 1000 or the small-cap Russell 2000 on total market capitalization, measured on the rank date that fell on April 30 this year.
The rebuilt indexes took effect after the market closed last Friday and began trading this week.
Lucid has been a small-cap stock since the 2025 reconstitution stripped it of large-cap status, and its market value has fallen further in the year since, leaving no path back toward the Russell 1000 that once held it.
The Saudi-backed EV maker’s equity is now worth about $2.63 billion, a fraction of the figure that qualified it as one of the 1,000 largest US companies for most of its life as a public company.
The listing marks a continuation rather than a change in fortune. Lucid shares traded slightly lower at $6.66 as of press time on Wednesday.
A Demotion Already a Year Old
Lucid was removed from the large-cap Russell 1000 and reassigned to the Russell 2000 in the 2025 reconstitution, one of 25 companies demoted to the small-cap benchmark that year.
The EV maker carried a market capitalization of about $8.51 billion at the time, enough to rank among the larger names in the Russell 2000 after the index provider applied its banding rules.
That same reconstitution sent Rivian in the opposite direction, promoting the rival brand into the Russell 1000.
Lucid had first entered the broad-market Russell 3000 in 2022, a membership that placed it automatically in the large-cap Russell 1000 given a valuation that approached $91 billion at its post-listing peak in late 2021.
The slide from that peak to small-cap status took roughly three years.
How Far It Has Fallen
The decline has accelerated since the demotion.
From the $8.51 billion that accompanied its 2025 exit, Lucid has shed most of its remaining market value, with the stock touching an all-time low of $4.47 in June before a relief rally driven by an above-consensus delivery preview.
Shares climbed more than 23.0% over two sessions into the end of the month, yet the stock remained down about 38.0% for the year, a slide that has tracked weak demand, a leadership exodus and heavy cash burn.
The optics of the share price are complicated by a corporate action from last year.
Lucid executed a one-for-ten reverse stock split effective August 29, 2025, a maneuver that lifted the nominal price and cut the share count to roughly 390 million, which is why a single-digit stock still corresponds to a multibillion-dollar valuation.
Below the Breakpoint
Lucid‘s market cap value of roughly $2.5 billion sat far below the roughly $5.7 billion threshold that separated the two indexes, placing it in small-cap territory without ambiguity.
The breakpoint itself rose 24.0% from the prior reconstitution, reflecting a broad expansion in US equity values, which pushed the bar for large-cap status even higher as Lucid‘s own value moved the other way.
The company’s ownership structure shapes how the stock behaves inside the index rather than which index it lands in.
FTSE Russell weights constituents by the portion of shares that trade freely, and Lucid‘s float is unusually thin.
Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, through its Ayar Third Investment Company vehicle, holds about 56.9% of the company’s common stock, a controlling position that index methodology typically excludes from float.
The concentrated stake leaves Lucid with a smaller weight in the Russell 2000 than its headline value would suggest, muting the passive demand that index membership channels into the shares.
When the company fell from the Russell 1000 to the Russell 2000 in 2025, the move forced large-cap index funds to sell and small-cap funds to buy, though the modest size of the position limited the net effect.
A New Reconstitution Calendar
This year’s reshuffle came against the backdrop of a structural change in how the benchmarks are maintained.
FTSE Russell announced last December that it would move the Russell US Indexes from an annual reconstitution to a semi-annual one, pointing to heightened market volatility and the swelling pool of assets that track the benchmarks.
The change adds a second reconstitution to the calendar from 2026, meaning Lucid‘s membership will be reassessed again later in the year rather than held for a full twelve months.
Roughly $11 trillion to $12 trillion is benchmarked to the Russell US indexes, a scale that makes the reconstitution one of the highest-volume trading events of the year and gives index placement outsized weight for the companies involved.













