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Juiced Bikes spent 15 years as a beloved e-bike brand building some of the most iconic and highest-performance electric bicycles in the US market. But financial troubles put the brand into a tailspin last year, ultimately culminating in bankruptcy and closure. The brand appeared to be a goner until two young e-bike entrepreneurs stepped up to try and salvage Juiced’s legacy in a deal whose details have never been revealed – until now.

I covered the apparent collapse of Juiced Bikes late last year, including watching the company’s assets eventually surface on an auction site seemingly run as a way to repay Juiced’s creditors.

The auction included everything from Juiced Bikes’ designs, patents, and other intellectual property (IP) to its wide assortment of e-bike inventory and spare parts, and even the company’s Sprinter delivery van. The submitters of the winning bid were revealed to be Levi Conlow and Robby Deziel, the free-spirited founders of the largest electric bicycle company in the US, Phoenix-based Lectric Ebikes. I reported on that revelation last month, but the rest of the story had remained a mystery.

I recently had the chance to talk to Lectric Ebikes’ CEO Levi Conlow about the rollercoaster ride of trying to buy Juiced Bikes, and what comes next in the long process of restoring the brand to its former glory.

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This is that story.

Lectric co-founders Robby Deziel (left) and Levi Conlow (right) sporting their new Juiced Bikes swag

Levi, Robby, and the entire team at Lectric Ebikes have long shown a penchant for giving back not just to the broader e-bike community, but also for taking a wholistic approach to philanthropy as a company. In the past I’ve covered how they give away millions of dollars each year, both in terms of free e-bikes and donations to worthy causes.

Considering that the concept of doing the right thing is firmly engrained in the Lectric DNA, this seemed to Levi as another chance to give back to the larger e-bike community.

“We saw it as an opportunity to once again show the industry that Lectric can do the right thing,” said Levi. “We always pride ourselves on doing the right thing. We saw this as an opportunity to buy Juiced, give it a pathway to continue on, put the necessary resources into it to make it successful, but also to help resolve all these customers that had just gotten burned.”

That was a major sore spot in Juiced’s larger fall from grace. Not only did the brand cease operations and leave its tens of thousands of riders without support, but hundreds of customers had already paid in full for pre-ordered electric bikes that were never delivered.

“Our plan was to get that inventory and send those bikes to the customers that had already paid, and then we’d begin fresh once those customers are taken care of,” Levi explained. “We could pause for a bit then and rebuild the brand.”

The auction for Juiced’s assets, both physical and IP, included hundreds of e-bikes that were sitting in US logistics warehouses, waiting to be shipped to customers who had already paid for them.

After placing the winning bid in the auction, Levi and Robby intended to ship those e-bikes out to their original owners as quickly as possible. But the pair immediately ran into the first of what would soon become an ever-growing pile of obstacles.

“So we win the winning bid for this auction. And after we win the auction, I called the agency that ran the process and I was like, ‘Hey, my name is Levi Conlow. I just won this bid, what’s the next step?!’ and they were like, ‘Well, now it’s up to the creditors and the seller to decide if your bid is acceptable,’ and I’m thinking, ‘What?! What do you mean? I thought that was the point of the auction.’”

As it turned out, the $1.2 million winning bid wasn’t high enough to satisfy the creditors. Juiced owed significantly more than that. So Levi brought in the rest of his team and his board, then went back and forth with the company running the sale until new terms were finally accepted, and a deal was made to buy Juiced for a higher figure to get everything in the auction.

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Now that Lectric had bought up Juiced’s assets for a higher number which Juiced’s creditors could live with, the next step was to start moving out those bikes. That would be its own logistical problem and so Levi wanted to get to work on solving it right away.

“We wanted to make sure we could physically go pick up the inventory, even though we now owned it,” Levi continued. “So we reached out to the different warehouses where the inventory was stored and quickly the warehouses responded ‘No, they owe us this sum of money, so they have to pay it before the inventory can be picked up.’ And the amount of money in warehouse storage costs was ridiculous, because they had not been paying for warehousing for, well for some locations it seemed like years, so it was this massive balance. So the inventory at the warehouses wasn’t even worth the amount that the warehouses were owed.”

Despite the massive storage fee debts that Juiced had racked up, Levi was under the impression that he had bought and owned all that inventory after working out the deal with Juiced’s creditors. Unfortunately, he was then informed that the inventory had already been sold out from under him. “They told me, ‘Oh, so that inventory was already sold to some other company, it was kind of a supplier debt, and they took ownership over it.’ So at one point this inventory was sold to customers, then it was sold to me, and then it was sold to another company.”

I had already discovered that the Chinese-owned e-bike brand Velowave had begun selling what appeared to be brand-new Juiced Ebikes on its US website, and Levi confirmed that Velowave was, in fact, the other company that had snatched up the inventory that was mostly pre-sold to existing customers.

With that US-based inventory lost, the next goal for Levi and Robby was to hopefully get ahold of the inventory and spare parts that were left in Asia.

However, Levi soon discovered that the Asian suppliers were owed around twice as much as the US-based creditors. “These Asian suppliers, many of them were left out of millions and millions of dollars owed to them. That relationship between Juiced and its suppliers is so far gone that there is no pathway for us to get bikes and parts from them. The non-proprietary stuff like Shimano parts and Tektro, the wheels and parts like that, that stuff is pretty easy to get. But the proprietary parts like controllers and motors, those are relationships that have really been damaged by the amount of money that Juiced owed.”

The damage done by the trail of debt left in Juiced’s wake is a problem that Lectric is now wading through.

“That’s one of the biggest hurdles we have to overcome,” sighed Levi. “There are a couple of suppliers that overlap with Lectric’s supply chain or where their sister companies already work with Lectric. And Lectric’s checks always clear – we’ve never missed a payment, we always pay on time. So there are a couple suppliers that we’re going to be able to resolve with and be able to get some warranty parts, but something that it’s important for people to know and prepare for is that for the vast majority, unfortunately, we are not going to be able to remedy those relationships. That’s basically been most of the work I’ve been doing recently, is trying to repair those relationships.”

juiced scrambler x2

Now, Levi and Robby are working on a solution to make things right for the hundreds of Juiced customers who are left empty-handed, out thousands of dollars for their pre-order and with no e-bike to show for it. But even that work has been hampered by the slow process of physically taking over Juiced’s digital assets, including access to the company’s website and the sales info trapped inside of it.

“Even getting into a platform like Shopify to figure out which customers didn’t get paid and what is owed to certain customers, that’s basically one of our only options right now for Rob and I, is to figure out who hasn’t been paid, reach out to those customers and write them a check to reimburse them or maybe offer them an e-bike from Lectric’s lineup. But we can’t even get into Shopify yet because Shopify was also owed a ton of money, and we can’t get into the email list because the email list was owed a lot of money too. All of those things are resolved through the bankruptcy, but there’s a legal process of providing the proper documentation and reporting in order for us to get access to those things. So there’s a lot of work before I can even turn the website on and email my first customer. But that is priority #1 right now, is to get the website live and communicate with customers.”

From there, the next step will be rebuilding the high-performance e-bike lineup that Juiced spent years developing. As involved as Levi and Robby will be, they also still have to run North America’s largest e-bike company, Lectric Ebikes, and so Juiced will still need a dedicated team of its own. “The first real hire we’re going to make is probably to hire a product manager. With how long development will take, maybe we can get it done in 9-12 months, but that really requires someone dedicating their full focus on it. So our day one objective is to hire someone to start rebuilding the product portfolio from the ground up,” explained Levi, before offering to toss that massive undertaking my way. “Are you bored? Are you looking for more work, Micah?,” he laughed.

As awesome of a job as that would be, the mere 24 hours I get in a day don’t seem quite enough for me, and I can only imagine how daunting of a task that will be for someone coming in ready to throw their entire focus at it. But Levi sounds excited about the possibilities, even as he acknowledges the headwinds they will face.

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The direction that the new Juiced e-bikes will go is still uncertain, but it sounds like the designs will remain true to the style and performance of e-bikes that helped Juiced build its massive fanbase over the last decade and a half.

“There’s an iconicness to bikes like the Scrambler, Scorpion, and Juiced’s products like that,” Levi reflected. “I think we need to carry forward that performance and platform, but some industrial design needs to happen there as well. For the most part, the things that made us like Juiced over the last 15 years as a community of riders, that stuff is going to carry over into the next 15 years. The high performance, the awesome torque and acceleration, it’s something special. And we ought to carry that on because that’s what people really loved about the brand in the first place, so it’d be foolish to lose that.”

As for the division between Lectric Ebikes and Juiced moving forward, Levi has clear intentions there. It appears that Juiced will remain a separate company from Lectric, even if it benefits from the relationships and the purchasing power that Lectric enjoys. “I’m really looking forward to this challenge,” Levi continued, “because I see an extremely clear pathway to making this successful. You know, Lectric is the #1 selling bike company here in North America, and I think that the expectation for how Rob and I should push ourselves is to try and get Juiced to #2.”

That clear pathway in Levi’s mind is based upon a tried and true formula that he and his Lectric co-founder Robby Deziel developed over the last six years of building Lectric Ebikes. “So how do you do that?” Levi asked himself. “You’ve got to have the world’s best performance, the best price point, and exceptional customer service. And those are things that we have a ton of experience with. We know exactly how those formulas work. And so we have very high aspirations for Juiced.”

juiced scorpion X e-bike

That experience is going to be a major benefit to rebuilding Juiced Bikes. “On day one, Juiced will get the benefit of our economies of scale. Our shipping rates are 75% less than what Juiced was paying to ship to customers. I haven’t fully run the numbers yet, but maybe that one thing alone is enough to take Juiced from unprofitable to breaking even. And then if you look at Lectric’s rates for shipping containers or our optimization for how we run every aspect of our business, there’s a very clear path to Juiced not just being reborn, but being a good business, fundamentally.”

It sounds like Levi, Robby, and the rest of their team at Lectric Ebikes have their work cut out for them. It’s not something foreign to any of them, and now they have the benefit of years of experience doing this once before.

However, they must also forge ahead against the headwinds of tariff uncertainty and without the boost offered by a post-pandemic e-bike buying spree. If there was ever an e-bike brand whose iconic legacy was worth fighting for though, Juiced Bikes is it.

As a final note, I contacted Juiced Bikes’ founder and former CEO, Tora Harris, for comment on this story but did not receive a response.

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Uber plans to offer self-driving rides in Texas with May Mobility this year

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Uber plans to offer self-driving rides in Texas with May Mobility this year

Uber announced that it will offer self-driving rides powered by May Mobility on its app in Texas later this year.

The ride-hailing platform will have both Waymo and May Mobility on its platform in Texas, while Tesla plans to compete with them all in Austin soon.

Tesla is grabbing a lot of headlines with its plan to offer self-driving ride-hailing rides in Austin starting this June, but Waymo has already been providing the same in Austin on Uber’s platform for months and now a new competitor is coming to Texas.

Michidan’s May Mobility has been somewhat under the radar in the autonomous driving space, but it has been around for almost a decade and has received large funding from Toyota, BMW, and several insurance companies.

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Yesterday, they announced a significant step: deploying thousands of vehicles on Uber’s platform within the next few years.

They plan to launch the first vehicles as soon as this year in Arlington, Texas:

Uber Technologies, Inc. (NYSE: UBER) and May Mobility, Inc., a leading autonomous vehicle (AV) technology company, today announced a new multi-year strategic partnership. May Mobility aims to deploy thousands of AVs on the Uber platform over the next few years, with an initial launch planned for Arlington, Texas, by the end of 2025. The partnership highlights both companies’ shared ambition to quickly scale AV use in ride-hail, broadening access to AVs across diverse markets and driving greater consumer choice.

May Mobility uses hybrid Toyota Sienna vans outfitted with its own sensor suite, and it has been launching test programs in Arlington since 2021, so it’s very familiar with the locale.

Dara Khosrowshahi, CEO of Uber, commented on the news:

“We are thrilled to be partnering with May Mobility to continue to scale the availability of autonomous vehicles across the United States. At Uber, we’re building the future of transportation, working with the world’s leading autonomous vehicle developers like May Mobility to help commercialize and deploy this technology quickly at scale around the world.”

Edwin Olson, CEO and co-founder of May Mobility, added:

“Launching on the Uber platform is a big signal to the market that May Mobility is ready to quickly expand to major markets as the pre-eminent autonomy-as-a-service provider. Uber and May Mobility will make it possible for more people across the U.S. to enjoy the transformative benefits of autonomous vehicles.”

If this project goes through, it means Uber is going to be offering driverless rides from both Waymo and May Mobility in Texas by the end of the year.

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Block plunges 20% as Cash App miss triggers downgrades

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Block plunges 20% as Cash App miss triggers downgrades

Block shares plunge on revenue miss, slashed guidance

Block shares were on track for their second-worst day Friday, plunging more than 20% as investors digested a brutal quarterly report and a wave of analyst downgrades centered on one issue: Cash App.

The first-quarter earnings miss rattled Wall Street, prompting multiple firms — including Wells Fargo, Seaport, BMO, and Benchmark — to downgrade the stock overnight. Many flagged fresh concerns around stagnant Cash App user growth, muted consumer demand, and a soft macro environment that may weigh on monetization.

“Stagnation in the number of active users of the app is even more concerning than users’ reduced spending,” Benchmark wrote in its note, downgrading Block to Hold.

The financial services company missed across the board — on revenue, gross profit, and payment volume — and slashed its full-year guidance, citing macro uncertainty, weaker consumer spending, and lower-than-expected inflows during what’s typically a strong tax refund season.

“I just don’t think we were focused enough and had enough attention on the network and the network density, and that is our foundation,” CEO Jack Dorsey said on the earnings call. “We of course want to deepen engagement with our customers through banking services and Borrow, and I have no doubt we will … but at the same time, we need to make sure that we continuously grow our network, and that starts with peer to peer.”

Cash App generated $1.38 billion in gross profit in the first quarter, up 10% from a year earlier, but shy of the $1.42 billion StreetAccount consensus. Monthly actives remained flat at 57 million — and inflows rose just 8%, despite new features like Afterpay on the Cash Card and broader efforts to position Cash App as a full-fledged banking alternative.

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Wells Fargo called out “numerous Cash App monetization red flags,” while Seaport pointed to several consecutive quarters of negative GPV growth. Even Morgan Stanley, which reiterated its Overweight rating, called the Cash App miss “surprising” — though it highlighted better-than-expected momentum in the Square seller business, particularly in international markets.

BMO downgraded the stock to Market Perform. Wells Fargo said it’s unwilling to “lay out for the second half Hail Mary,” moving to Equal Weight. Seaport downgraded to Neutral, writing: “Will the real Jack Dorsey please stand up?”

Still, some maintained optimism, with Bank of America reiterating its Buy rating, calling the stock undervalued, and Morgan Stanley saying it was an attractive near-term entry point.

Block’s turnaround plan hinges on lending. The company says Cash App Borrow — now approved by the FDIC to originate loans through its bank subsidiary — will double the number of eligible users and improve margins by bringing servicing in-house.

Marketing spend is also expected to jump 50% in Q2 as Block looks to reaccelerate growth in the back half of the year.

“We are not sufficiently confident in the likelihood of such a rebound to recommend buying the stock on weakness,” Benchmark wrote.

Meanwhile, rival Venmo is showing signs of momentum.

Parent company PayPal reported a 20% revenue jump for the app in Q1, driven by increased adoption of Venmo’s debit card, instant transfers, and growing volume at checkout. While PayPal didn’t disclose an exact revenue figure for Venmo, it said monetization per user is improving — the result of a clear push to embed Venmo deeper into e-commerce flows.

Two very different strategies are now unfolding: Cash App is leaning deeper into lending and banking, while Venmo is chasing spend at checkout. But the goal, however, is the same: Owning the consumer’s wallet.

Right now, Venmo appears to be gaining ground, while Cash App is regrouping.

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Hyundai’s new electric SUV is here: IONIQ 9 prices start at $60,555 with 335 miles range

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Hyundai's new electric SUV is here: IONIQ 9 prices start at ,555 with 335 miles range

Hyundai’s first three-row electric SUV will arrive at US dealerships any day now. The 2026 Hyundai IONIQ 9 is an impressive SUV with up to 335 miles of driving range, fast charging capabilities, room for seven, and prices start at just $60,555.

Hyundai reveals 2026 IONIQ 9 prices and specs

After the first IONIQ 9 models rolled off the assembly line at Hyundai’s new manufacturing plant in Georgia in early March, the electric SUV is finally about to reach dealerships.

Hyundai revealed prices and specs for the 2026 IONIQ 9 on Friday as it gears up for deliveries. The three-row electric SUV starts at just $58,955. Including a $1,600 freight charge, the entry-level 2026 IONIQ 9 RWD S model costs $60,555, and that’s with a range of up to 335 miles.

Upgrading to the AWD SE model with 303 horsepower and 320 miles range will cost $64,365, including destination.

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The 2026 IONIQ 9 AWD Performance Limited, with 422 horsepower, 21″ wheels, and 311 miles range, starts at $72,850, including the destination charge.

For the range-topping Hyundai IONIQ 9 AWD Performance Calligraphy Design trim, which gets added Matte paint, 21″ wheels, and 311 miles driving range, prices start at $78,090.

Hyundai-IONIQ-9-prices
2026 Hyundai IONIQ 9 (Source: Hyundai)

Hyundai’s first three-row electric SUV is also one of the first non-Tesla vehicles sold with a native NACS port for charging at Tesla Superchargers. Using a 350 kW DC fast charger, the IONIQ 9 can charge from 10% to 80% in as little as 24 minutes.

The IONIQ 9 is 5,060 mm (199.2″) long, 1,980 mm (78″) wide, and 1,790 mm (70.5″) tall, or slightly bigger than the Kia EV9.

Inside, the “lounge-like” interior provides up to 1,322 liters of cargo space, topping Kia’s three-row EV9, which has up to 1,233 liters.

All IONIQ 9 models sold in the US are built in Georgia, alongside the updated IONIQ 5, and are eligible for the full $7,500 federal tax credit. Hyundai said 2026 IONIQ 9 models will begin arriving at dealerships by early May.

2026 Hyundai IONIQ 9 Model EV Powertrain Drivetrain Driving
Range
(miles)
Starting Price
(including destination fee)
IONIQ 9 RWD S 160-kW (215-HP)
Electric Motor
Rear-
Wheel
Drive
335 $60,555
IONIQ 9 AWD SE 226.1 kW (303-HP)
Dual Electric Motors
All-Wheel
Drive
320 $64,365
IONIQ 9 AWD SEL 226.1-kW (303-HP)
Dual Electric Motors
All-Wheel
Drive
320 $67,920
IONIQ 9 AWD 
PERFORMANCE LIMITED
314.6-kW (422-HP)
Dual Electric Motors
All-Wheel
Drive
311 $72,850
IONIQ 9 AWD
PERFORMANCE
CALLIGRAPHY
314.6-kW (422-HP)
Dual Electric Motors
All-Wheel
Drive
311 $76,590
IONIQ 9 AWD
PERFORMANCE
CALLIGRAPHY DESIGN
314.6-kW (422-HP)
Dual Electric Motors
All-Wheel
Drive
311 $78,090
2026 Hyundai IONIQ 9 prices and driving range by trim (*including a $1,600 destination fee)

For those interested, Hyundai is offering a free ChargePoint Home Flex Level 2 charger with the purchase or lease of any new 2026 IONIQ 9. If you already have a home charger, you can opt for a $400 charging credit.

If you’re looking for something a little smaller (and cheaper), the 2025 Hyundai IONIQ 5 is one of the best EV deals right now, with leases starting at just $209 per month. You can use our link to find 2025 Hyundai IONIQ 5 models at a dealer near you.

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