Rivian's path to survival is now remarkably clear

Date:

Share post:


Rivian has had a lot on its plate as it transitioned from pitch mode to selling EVs. It created an electric pickup and an electric SUV while prepping a monster IPO. It made electric delivery vans for Amazon and wants to do the same for other companies. It now plans to sell an even cheaper SUV that could make Rivian a dominant EV player for years to come. And it wanted to build an entirely new factory in Georgia where it would manufacture many of these vehicles.

With so many variables, the exact shape of the company’s future was hard to predict.

That has changed.

Earlier on Thursday, the company announced a fully revamped version of its first two consumer vehicles, the R1T pickup and the R1S SUV. Not only are they more technologically advanced, Rivian also made them more simple in a bid to dramatically slash the cost of building them.

Rivian also recently set aside its plan to build that factory in Georgia for now, opting instead to double-down on its existing facility in Illinois. The decision is going to save the company $2.25 billion and means it can focus all its efforts on one manufacturing staff in one factory.

These changes mean that, for the first time since the company broke stealth in 2018, Rivian’s immediate future is actually remarkably clear. The company needs to sell these revamped vehicles at a profit in order to sustain itself long enough to get to the cheaper mass market R2 SUV on the road (and the adorable R3 variant that took the automotive world by storm earlier this year). It knows exactly where that will happen, and it knows what it will take to get there.

“With Rivian’s latest move to refresh the R1T and R1S EVs, you can begin to see how the company aims to chart its way forward across the ‘EV valley of death,'” Corey Cantor, senior associate for electric vehicles at BloombergNEF, said in an email to TechCrunch. “If successful, they can use the fruits of this process as they scale-up the R2 and reach the mass market, en route to the R3.”

Other EV startups arguably have a harder path through that “valley of death.”

Take Lucid Motors, for example. The company has a well-regarded product in the Lucid Air sedan. But it has struggled to find buyers for the Air, with its own CEO Peter Rawlinson publicly admitting to failures on the marketing side. It’s only shipped around 12,000 cars to date, at least as of the end of the first quarter of this year.

Lucid Motors is now pinning a lot of its hopes on the forthcoming Gravity SUV. That vehicle should have wider appeal, given the popularity of the SUV form factor. But its success is nowhere near guaranteed, especially because it’s starting at a relatively high price point of “under $80,000.” And Lucid Motors needs the Gravity to succeed if it ever hopes to get to its own planned midsize, mass-market EV.

Other EV startups face more uncertainty. Canoo has changed its business model so many times that it’s often hard to keep tabs on what it plans to do with its bulbous EVs, first revealed in 2019. (Currently, the plan is to sell to fleets and government entities.) Faraday Future has been spending as much time fighting with its landlords as it has trying to sell its own luxury EV. Fisker is on the brink of bankruptcy after dealing with underwhelming sales of its electric SUV and myriad quality and service problems.

It won’t be easy for Rivian. The company is forecasting essentially no growth this year compared to 2023, and it started off on a flat foot. It may need to raise more money as a result — a challenging feat in the current economy.

But company says the changes to the R1 lineup set it on the path to reaching “positive gross profit” by the end of this year. That’s a big deal considering Rivian is still losing tens of thousands of dollars on each car it sells. If Rivian wants to survive long enough to ship its more affordable mass-market R2, it really needs these revamped vehicles to sell well.

“The path ahead is clearer than it was a year ago as Rivian has laid out its near-term plans,” Cantor said. “But ultimately execution of both profitability and high-volume EV sales is what is required for Rivian to become one of this decade’s EV success stories.”



Source link

Alexandra Williams
Alexandra Williams
Alexandra Williams is a writer and editor. Angeles. She writes about politics, art, and culture for LinkDaddy News.

Recent posts

Related articles

Russia invokes its nuclear capacity in a UN speech that's full of bile toward the West

Russia's top diplomat warned Saturday against “trying to fight to victory with a nuclear power,” delivering a...

Hashem Safieddine: possible successor to Hezbollah chief Nasrallah

Hashem Safieddine, a potential successor to his slain cousin Hassan Nasrallah, is one of Hezbollah's most prominent...

Regional politicians, others react to killing of Hezbollah's Nasrallah

(Reuters) -Following are reactions by regional politicians and others to the killing of Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan...

Mayor Eric Adams issues order changing First Deputy Mayor succession

NEW YORK (PIX11) – New York City Mayor Eric Adams, quietly issued a new executive order changing...

I lost faith in banks in 2009 — now I have $650K in cash sitting in a safe. Can I deposit this money legally?

Anyone who lived through the Great Recession remembers the tremendous economic turmoil that took place.Banks had made...

Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah killed in Beirut strike, Israel says

Hassan Nasrallah, the leader of the Lebanese Hezbollah militia, was killed in an Israeli strike on a...

Father trapped in jail 18 years after being given 8-month sentence – for waving a starting pistol

A father trapped under an abolished indefinite jail term has made six attempts on his own life...

Stocks head toward something that hasn’t happened since the days of the dot-com bubble

The S&P 500 is flirting with what would be a rare accomplishment: rising 20% or more during...