Ola Electric has fallen sharply and is now trading near its all-time low of ₹27.36, a decline of 64% from its IPO price. The company has also lost its leadership position in the EV two-wheeler market, dropping to fourth place with a market share of 5.87% as of January 27, 2026
What Went Wrong with Ola Electric? A Timeline of the Post
Ola Electric was listed on stock exchanges in August 2024 at ₹76 per share, the upper end of its IPO price band. At the time, the Bhavish Aggarwal-led company was the market leader in India’s electric two-wheeler segment, holding a 35% market share, according to Vahan portal data.
However, about a year and a half later, the stock has fallen sharply and is now trading near its all-time low of ₹27.36, a decline of 64% from its IPO price. The company has also lost its leadership position in the EV two-wheeler market, dropping to fourth place with a market share of 5.87% as of January 27, 2026.
Most analysts have now downgraded the stock to a “sell” rating, citing weak quarterly performance. Vehicle deliveries have also dropped significantly, falling 66.8% to 32,680 units.
What Went Wrong?
The company was once seen as India’s strongest prospect in the electric two-wheeler segment, but frequent strategy changes, weak financial performance, and concerns about product quality have gradually reduced investor confidence.
The company’s third-quarter (Q3 FY26) earnings, released on February 13, 2026, reflected this slowdown. Ola Electric reported a 31.9% sequential decline in revenue and a net loss of ₹487 crore. Revenue from operations stood at ₹470 crore, down from ₹690 crore in the previous quarter and 55% lower than ₹1,045 crore in the same quarter last year.
The adjusted operating EBITDA loss widened 25% compared to the previous quarter, reaching ₹323 crore from ₹258 crore, although it improved 34.6% compared to ₹494 crore a year earlier. The EBITDA margin also worsened, falling to negative 68.7% from negative 37.4% in the previous quarter. Total operating expenses increased slightly by 3.8% quarter-on-quarter to ₹432 crore but declined 34% compared to the year-ago period.
During the Q1 FY26 earnings, the expansion plan was paused due to slower-than-expected EV market growth. In Q2 FY26, after launching the Ola Shakti battery energy storage system (BESS), the company again said it would expand capacity to 20 GWh to meet expected demand.
Similarly, the company has also repeatedly lowered its break-even target. In Q3 FY25, Aggarwal said Ola would break even after selling 50,000 vehicles. This target was reduced to 25,000 units in the next quarter as part of cost-cutting efforts and has now been further lowered to 15,000 units, according to the latest results.
Investor confidence has also weakened. SoftBank has reduced its stake in Ola Electric from over 17% at the time of the IPO to 13.53% as of January 2026, selling more than 94 million shares between September 2025 and January 2026. Other major investors, including Tiger Global Management and Alpha Wave Ventures, have also reduced their holdings to less than 1% each.
TVS Motor is the market leader as of early 2026, while Bajaj Auto and Ather Energy are competing for the next positions, with Hero MotoCorp also expanding its presence.