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We’re now two months out from the end of the $7,500 federal EV tax credit on September 30, and this is proof that there are still pretty solid deals to be had on some rather spiffy EVs. In fact, three of our top five November specials are cheaper than what was offered in September, and two come with home EV chargers and free installation. Here are November’s top 5 EV lease deals, as spotted by our friends at CarsDirect.

Hyundai-EV-IONIQ-5
Photo: Hyundai

2025 Hyundai IONIQ 5 lease from $189/month

The updated 2025 Hyundai IONIQ 5 SE RWD Standard Range is still a standout EV lease deal, holding steady even after the end of the federal EV tax credit and new import tariffs. Through December 1, you can lease one for $189 a month for 36 months (10,000 miles per year) with $3,999 due at signing. That works out to an effective monthly cost of about $300.

The price bump is far smaller than many expected, especially considering Hyundai’s $17,000 in lease cash. And if you’re tempted by an upgrade, the SEL RWD trim is just $50 more per month under the same terms. You’ll get a model that’s roughly $7,000 more in value and $18,750 in savings. The IONIQ 5 SE RWD Standard Range offers an EPA-estimated 245 miles of range, and this particular offer is available in the Los Angeles and greater California metro areas.
Click here to find a local dealer that may have the Hyundai IONIQ 5 in stock. –trusted affiliate link

Hyundai-IONIQ-6-facelift-US

2025 Hyundai IONIQ 6 lease from $189/month

The 2025 Hyundai IONIQ 6 SE RWD Standard Range is tied with the IONIQ 5 for the most affordable EV lease deal this month, offering standout value even after the federal EV tax credit era. In the California metro area, you can lease it for $189 per month for 36 months (10,000 miles per year) with $3,999 due at signing, and Hyundai is sweetening the deal with $13,000 in lease cash.

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That brings the effective monthly cost to around $300. With an EPA-estimated 240 miles of range, 149 horsepower, fast-charging capabilities, and a sleek, distinctive design, the IONIQ 6 remains a fan favorite. This offer is valid through December 1.

Click here to find a local dealer that may have the Hyundai IONIQ 6 in stock. –trusted affiliate link

Ford Mustang Mach-E
Photo: Ford

2025 Ford Mustang Mach-E from $219/month

The 2025 Ford Mustang Mach-E Select RWD with Package 100A is offering bigger savings this month, making it an even stronger pick for EV shoppers. Known for its premium design and an EPA-estimated 300 miles of range, the Mach-E remains a favorite among drivers who want style and substance.

You can now lease it for $219 per month for 24 months (10,500 miles per year), with a down payment of $4,499 due at signing. That’s $20 less per month than the September advertised deal, although the term is shorter. With an effective monthly cost of around $406, it’s only $45 more than before the tax credit ended.

The offer includes $6,750 in lease cash for qualified lessees, plus a free Ford Charging Station Pro with complimentary home installation – a rare perk. If you already have a home charger, you can opt for an additional $2,000 in bonus cash instead. This deal is currently available in California through January 5, 2026.

Click here to find a local dealer that may have the Ford Mustang Mach-E in stock. –trusted affiliate link

Ford-F-150-lightning-XLT
Ford F-150 Lightning XLT Source: Ford

2025 Ford F-150 Lightning from $279/month

You can now lease a 2025 Ford F-150 Lightning 4×4 Super Crew XLT w/ Pkg 311A for a low monthly payment of $279 for 36 months (10,500 miles) and $6,729 due at signing. With an MSRP of $65,190, that makes the effective monthly cost of $466. It has an EPA-estimated range of 240 miles and 452 hp.

That’s $23 less a month than the advertised September lease deal with the federal tax credit. The offer includes $9,500 in lease cash and, like the Mach-e, a complimentary home EV charger and installation or an additional $2,000 in savings. This offer is available in California through January 5, 2026.

Click here to find a local dealer that may have the Ford F-150 Lightning in stock. –trusted affiliate link

2025-Subaru-Solterra-EV-recall
2025 Subaru Solterra (Source: Subaru)

2025 Subaru Solterra from $279/month

Not only is the monthly payment on the Subaru Solterra just $279 for 36 months, the amount due at signing is also just $279. That makes the effective monthly cost just $287, making this the cheapest overall EV on this list. That’s a pretty good deal for an EV with a nearly $40,000 MSRP – and it’s cheaper than the offer that was on the table in September.

The 2025 Subaru Solterra has an EPA-estimated range of 227 miles on a single charge. This offer is available in the Los Angeles and San Francisco regions until December 1.

Click here to find a local dealer that may have the Subaru Solterra in stock. –trusted affiliate link


The 30% federal solar tax credit is ending this year. If you’ve ever considered going solar, now’s the time to act. To make sure you find a trusted, reliable solar installer near you that offers competitive pricing, check out EnergySage, a free service that makes it easy for you to go solar. It has hundreds of pre-vetted solar installers competing for your business, ensuring you get high-quality solutions and save 20-30% compared to going it alone. Plus, it’s free to use, and you won’t get sales calls until you select an installer and share your phone number with them. 

Your personalized solar quotes are easy to compare online and you’ll get access to unbiased Energy Advisors to help you every step of the way. Get started here.

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MP Materials CEO warns investors to approach suddenly hot rare earths industry with caution

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MP Materials CEO warns investors to approach suddenly hot rare earths industry with caution

MP Materials' shares slide in overtime on quarterly revenue miss

Pentagon-backed MP Materials warned investors this week to approach other rare earths projects with caution, pointing to the industry’s difficult economics.

Stocks of U.S. rare earth companies have had wild swings in recent months as investors have speculated that the Trump administration might strike more deals along the lines of its landmark agreement with MP. Smaller retail traders have gotten involved in the stocks with the VanEck Rare Earth and Strategic Metals ETF up 60% this year.

The Defense Department in July took an equity stake in MP, set a price floor for the company, and inked an offtake agreement with the rare earth miner and magnet maker in an effort to roll back China’s dominance of the industry.

CEO James Litinsky said he didn’t want “people to get burned” amid the speculation. Litinsky cautioned investors “to just be very clear-eyed about what the actual structural economics are amidst all the excitement.”

“The vast majority of projects being promoted today simply will not work at virtually any price,” Litinksy said on the company’s third-quarter earnings call Thursday evening.

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VanEck Rare Earth and Strategic Metals ETF, YTD

MP views itself as “America’s national champion,” Litinsky said. MP is the only active rare earth miner in the U.S. and has offtake agreements with Apple and General Motors in addition to the Pentagon.

“We have structural advantage because we’re fully vertically integrated,” the CEO said. “We’re years and billions ahead of others.”

It takes years for the best rare earth producers to ramp up and stabilize their output and economics “despite what some promoters might suggest,” Litinksy said. Australia’s Lynas took about a decade and MP will reach normalized production in about three years from the start of commissioning, he said.

MP Materials CEO on U.S. government deal: We can truly solve the rare earths magnetics crisis

The White House is “not ruling out other deals with equity stakes or price floors as we did with MP Materials, but that doesn’t mean every initiative we take would be in the shape of the MP deal,” a Trump administration official told CNBC in September.

Litinsky described the rare earth industry as close to a “structural oligopoly,” a system where there are just a few major players. The government investing in a dozens of sites and businesses wouldn’t necessarily set up a supply chain, he said.

The Trump administration should continue to encourage private capital to flow into the industry through loans, grants and other support, Litinsky said. There is room for “a lot of other players and supply” but the market will require “materially higher prices” for the industry’s structural challenges to change, he said.

“If X dollars of capital can stimulate two or three X in private capital, they should be doing that as much as possible,” Litinsky said.

The CEO indicated that he views MP as a forerunner that will help create the conditions for a broader market that is not dependent on China over time.

“In the very short term the administration has made sure that we have a successful national champion in MP,” Litinsky said. “We are going to sort of pave the path if you will to then figure out how there’s much broader supply coming online.”

Rare earths are crucial for making magnets that are key inputs in U.S. weapons platforms, semiconductor manufacturing, electric vehicles, clean energy technology and consumer electronics. Beijing dominates the global supply chain and the U.S. is dependent on China for imports.

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Wheel-E Podcast: CA e-bike voucher dies, Zero Motorcycles scooter, VMAX review, and more

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Wheel-E Podcast: CA e-bike voucher dies, Zero Motorcycles scooter, VMAX review, and more

This week on Electrek’s Wheel-E podcast, we discuss the most popular news stories from the world of electric bikes and other nontraditional electric vehicles. This time, that includes a new e-bike model from Tenways, California kills off its e-bike voucher program, a review of the new VMAX VX2 Hub e-scooter, Zero launches a scooter, NIU’s got a new micro-car, and more.

The Wheel-E podcast returns every two weeks on Electrek’s YouTube channel, Facebook, Linkedin, and Twitter.

As a reminder, we’ll have an accompanying post, like this one, on the site with an embedded link to the live stream. Head to the YouTube channel to get your questions and comments in.

After the show ends, the video will be archived on YouTube and the audio on all your favorite podcast apps:

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We also have a Patreon if you want to help us to avoid more ads and invest more in our content. We have some awesome gifts for our Patreons and more coming.

Here are a few of the articles that we will discuss during the Wheel-E podcast today:

Here’s the live stream for today’s episode starting at 9:00 a.m. ET (or the video after 10:00 a.m. ET):

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Google’s decade-long bet on custom chips is turning into company’s secret weapon in AI race

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Google's decade-long bet on custom chips is turning into company's secret weapon in AI race

Sopa Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images

Nvidia has established itself as the undisputed leader in artificial intelligence chips, selling large quantities of silicon to most of the world’s biggest tech companies en route to a $4.5 trillion market cap.

One of Nvidia’s key clients is Google, which has been loading up on the chipmaker’s graphics processing units, or GPUs, to try and keep pace with soaring demand for AI compute power in the cloud.

While there’s no sign that Google will be slowing its purchases of Nvidia GPUs, the internet giant is increasingly showing that it’s not just a buyer of high-powered silicon. It’s also a developer.

On Thursday, Google announced that its most powerful chip yet, called Ironwood, is being made widely available in the coming weeks. It’s the seventh generation of Google’s Tensor Processing Unit, or TPU, the company’s custom silicon that’s been in the works for more than a decade.

TPUs are application-specific integrated circuits, or ASICs, which play a crucial role in AI by providing highly specialized and efficient hardware for particular tasks. Google says Ironwood is designed to handle the heaviest AI workloads, from training large models to powering real-time chatbots and AI agents, and is more than four times faster than its predecessor. AI startup Anthropic plans to use up to 1 million of them to run its Claude model.

For Google, TPUs offer a competitive edge at a time when all the hyperscalers are rushing to build mammoth data centers, and AI processors can’t get manufactured fast enough to meet demand. Other cloud companies are taking a similar approach, but are well behind in their efforts.

Amazon Web Services made its first cloud AI chip, Inferentia, available to customers in 2019, followed by Trainium three years later. Microsoft didn’t announce its first custom AI chip, Maia, until the end of 2023.

“Of the ASIC players, Google’s the only one that’s really deployed this stuff in huge volumes,” said Stacy Rasgon, an analyst covering semiconductors at Bernstein. “For other big players, it takes a long time and a lot of effort and a lot of money. They’re the furthest along among the other hyperscalers.”

Google didn’t provide a comment for this story.

Google's AI chip 'Ironwood' takes on Nvidia

Originally trained for internal workloads, Google’s TPUs have been available to cloud customers since 2018. Of late, Nvidia has shown some level of concern. When OpenAI signed its first cloud contract with Google earlier this year, the announcement spurred Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang to initiate further talks with the AI startup and its CEO, Sam Altman, according to reporting by The Wall Street Journal.

Unlike Nvidia, Google isn’t selling its chips as hardware, but rather providing access to TPUs as a service through its cloud, which has emerged as one of the company’s big growth drivers. In its third-quarter earnings report last week, Google parent Alphabet said cloud revenue increased 34% from a year earlier to $15.15 billion, beating analyst estimates. The company ended the quarter with a business backlog of $155 billion.

“We are seeing substantial demand for our AI infrastructure products, including TPU-based and GPU-based solutions,” CEO Sundar Pichai said on the earnings call. “It is one of the key drivers of our growth over the past year, and I think on a going-forward basis, I think we continue to see very strong demand, and we are investing to meet that.”

Google doesn’t break out the size of its TPU business within its cloud segment. Analysts at D.A. Davidson estimated in September that a “standalone” business consisting of TPUs and Google’s DeepMind AI division could be valued at about $900 billion, up from an estimate of $717 billion in January. Alphabet’s current market cap is more than $3.4 trillion.

‘Tightly targeted’ chips

Customization is a major differentiator for Google. One critical advantage, analysts say, is the efficiency TPUs offer customers relative to competitive products and services.

“They’re really making chips that are very tightly targeted for their workloads that they expect to have,” said James Sanders, an analyst at Tech Insights.

Rasgon said that efficiency is going to become increasingly important because with all the infrastructure that’s being built, the “likely bottleneck probably isn’t chip supply, it’s probably power.”

On Tuesday, Google announced Project Suncatcher, which explores “how an interconnected network of solar-powered satellites, equipped with our Tensor Processing Unit (TPU) AI chips, could harness the full power of the Sun.”

As a part of the project, Google said it plans to launch two prototype solar-powered satellites carrying TPUs by early 2027.

“This approach would have tremendous potential for scale, and also minimizes impact on terrestrial resources,” the company said in the announcement. “That will test our hardware in orbit, laying the groundwork for a future era of massively-scaled computation in space.”

Dario Amodei, co-founder and chief executive officer of Anthropic, at the World Economic Forum in 2025.

Stefan Wermuth | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Google’s largest TPU deal on record landed late last month, when the company announced a massive expansion of its agreement with OpenAI rival Anthropic valued in the tens of billions of dollars. With the partnership, Google is expected to bring well over a gigawatt of AI compute capacity online in 2026.

“Anthropic’s choice to significantly expand its usage of TPUs reflects the strong price-performance and efficiency its teams have seen with TPUs for several years,” Google Cloud CEO Thomas Kurian said at the time of the announcement.

Google has invested $3 billion in Anthropic. And while Amazon remains Anthropic’s most deeply embedded cloud partner, Google is now providing the core infrastructure to support the next generation of Claude models.

“There is such demand for our models that I think the only way we would have been able to serve as much as we’ve been able to this year is this multi-chip strategy,” Anthropic Chief Product Officer Mike Krieger told CNBC.

That strategy spans TPUs, Amazon Trainium and Nvidia GPUs, allowing the company to optimize for cost, performance and redundancy. Krieger said Anthropic did a lot of up-front work to make sure its models can run equally well across the silicon providers.

“I’ve seen that investment pay off now that we’re able to come online with these massive data centers and meet customers where they are,” Krieger said.

Hefty spending is coming

Two months before the Anthropic deal, Google forged a six-year cloud agreement with Meta worth more than $10 billion, though it’s not clear how much of the arrangement includes use of TPUs. And while OpenAI said it will start using Google’s cloud as it diversifies away from Microsoft, the company told Reuters it’s not deploying GPUs.

Alphabet CFO Anat Ashkenazi attributed Google’s cloud momentum in the latest quarter to rising enterprise demand for Google’s full AI stack. The company said it signed more billion-dollar cloud deals in the first nine months of 2025 than in the previous two years combined.

“In GCP, we see strong demand for enterprise AI infrastructure, including TPUs and GPUs,” Ashkenazi said, adding that users are also flocking to the company’s latest Gemini offerings as well as services “such as cybersecurity and data analytics.”

Google opens access to its most powerful AI chip

Amazon, which reported 20% growth in its market-leading cloud infrastructure business last quarter, is expressing similar sentiment.

AWS CEO Matt Garman told CNBC in a recent interview that the company’s Trainium chip series is gaining momentum. He said “every Trainium 2 chip we land in our data centers today is getting sold and used,” and he promised further performance gains and efficiency improvements with Trainium 3.

Shareholders have shown a willingness to stomach hefty investments.

Google just raised the high end of its capital expenditures forecast for the year to $93 billion, up from prior guidance of $85 billion, with an even steeper ramp expected in 2026. The stock price soared 38% in the third quarter, its best performance for any period in 20 years, and is up another 17% in the fourth quarter.

Mizuho recently pointed to Google’s distinct cost and performance advantage with TPUs, noting that while the chips were originally built for internal use, Google is now winning external customers and bigger workloads.

Morgan Stanley analysts wrote in a report in June that while Nvidia’s GPUs will likely remain the dominant chip provider in AI, growing developer familiarity with TPUs could become a meaningful driver of Google Cloud growth.

And analysts at D.A. Davidson said in September that they see so much demand for TPUs that Google should consider selling the systems “externally to customers,” including frontier AI labs.

“We continue to believe that Google’s TPUs remain the best alternative to Nvidia, with the gap between the two closing significantly over the past 9-12 months,” they wrote. “During this time, we’ve seen growing positive sentiment around TPUs.”

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Amazon's $11B data center goes live: Here's an inside look

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