Should You Buy Rivian While It’s Below $15?

Should You Buy Rivian While It’s Below ?


  • Rivian makes electric trucks for both consumers and businesses.

  • The company is about to introduce a lower-priced vehicle for consumers.

  • Cost improvements are paving the way for a brighter future at the bottom of the income statement.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Rivian Automotive ›

Rivian (NASDAQ: RIVN) has a problem at the bottom of its income statement. And that problem, red ink, is likely to continue to be an issue for a while longer. But there are signs of material progress at this electric vehicle (EV) maker that investors should watch closely. In fact, the company’s progress toward black ink could speed up very soon.

Rivian makes EV pickups, vans, and SUVs for both the commercial and consumer markets. It is, basically, an upstart electric vehicle company, trying to copy some of the success that Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) has achieved. The key difference is that the company is focused more on larger vehicles like SUVs, which are particularly popular in the U.S. market.

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Breaking into the automotive business is no small task, given that the industry is filled with long-entrenched giants. Virtually all of the major auto companies are building EVs now. And then there’s the huge upfront costs associated with an industry that is highly capital-intensive and highly regulated. Tesla proved it can be done, but it did that when there was basically no competition in the EV space.

That said, Rivian has made a huge amount of progress as a company, hitting key milestone after key milestone. It hasn’t been a smooth path. Few businesses manage to fly higher in a straight line. But, overall, Rivian has been doing very well.

At this point, the company has a successful commercial product and a successful consumer product. On the commercial side, a partnership with Amazon helped to fund Rivian’s early development efforts. And now the EV maker is looking to expand its commercial business, selling delivery trucks to more customers. The big news, however, is on the consumer side.

After ramping up its production capacity, Rivian retooled its factory and upgraded its SUVs. The key outcome was that it was able to reduce costs to the point where it turned a modest gross profit in the fourth quarter of 2024. That was the target, with the feat repeated in the first quarter of 2025. This only means that Rivian made more money selling EVs than it cost to build those EVs. It is still losing money because of the other costs associated with the business, including R&D and SG&A — which is where the next big step comes in.


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