Einride, the Swedish innovator in electric and autonomous freight transport, has confirmed its intention to become a publicly traded company through a merger with special purpose acquisition vehicle Legato Merger Corp, valuing the enterprise at $1.8 billion on a pre-money equity basis. The transaction, disclosed on Wednesday, comes merely six weeks after the firm secured a $100 million investment round, highlighting robust investor appetite for its vision of reshaping global logistics.
According to the joint statement from both entities, the deal is projected to yield approximately $219 million in gross proceeds, excluding any potential redemptions of Legato’s outstanding shares, with an additional pursuit of up to $100 million through private investment in public equity. As reported by TechCrunch, the merger is anticipated to finalise during the first half of 2026, paving the way for Einride to commence trading on the New York Stock Exchange under its own ticker symbol.
Established in 2016, Einride initially focused on electrifying heavy-duty trucking before expanding into driverless pod vehicles—compact, cabless units engineered exclusively for autonomous operation on predetermined paths—and sophisticated software for optim optimising shipper networks. Under the leadership of newly appointed chief executive Roozbeh Charli, the company has cultivated three core revenue streams while extending operations beyond its Scandinavian origins to encompass a fleet of 200 electric heavy goods vehicles across Europe, North America, and the United Arab Emirates, serving prominent clients such as Heineken, PepsiCo, Carlsberg Sweden, and DP World.
Progress with its autonomous pods has been notable, with deployments for Swedish pharmacy group Apotea and GE Appliances in the United States demonstrating real-world viability. Einride, which maintains a secondary headquarters in Austin, Texas, further revealed a current annual recurring revenue run rate of around $45 million, bolstered by a contracted pipeline totalling $65 million, figures that underscore accelerating commercial traction amid the broader shift toward sustainable supply chains.
The October funding infusion, involving returning backer EQT Ventures alongside quantum computing specialist IonQ, was earmarked for expanding customer deployments and hast, particularly, hastening advancements in self-driving technology. This latest capital raise follows a substantial $500 million Series C in 2022, comprising $200 million in equity from investors including Northzone, Temasek, and Swedish pension fund AMF, plus $300 million in debt facilities orchestrated by Barclays Europe.
Einride’s chosen path to public markets via a Spac aligns with strategies adopted by peers in the autonomous vehicle sphere, where merger routes have provided expedited access to growth capital amid volatile private funding environments. As noted by Reuters, precedents include Aurora’s $13 billion Spac listing in 2021, which supported its supervised self-driving truck services, and Kodiak AI’s recent public debut earlier this year, reflecting a recurring trend among freight automation firms seeking to bridge valuation gaps in challenging economic conditions.
Market analysts suggest the timing could prove advantageous, with renewed interest in electrification and autonomy driven by regulatory pressures for decarbonisation and labour shortages in long-haul transport. Einride’s Saga platform, which integrates intelligent routing and charging infrastructure, positions it uniquely to capture share in a sector projected to require trillions in investment over the coming decade to meet net-zero targets.
As the merger progresses toward completion, Einride aims to leverage the influx to intensify research into remote vehicle supervision and expand its grid of dedicated freight corridors, potentially transforming how goods move across continents with minimal human intervention.

