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Following A Downgrade, Rivian Gets A Price Cut

April 19, 2023
minute read

Currently, things are not going well for the shareholders of Rivian Automotive when it comes to their investments. There is a decline in the company's stock as it struggles to control costs and ramp up production as it tries to control costs. Additionally, Wall Street is not helping the situation either.

According to RBC Capital Markets analyst Tom Narayan, Rivian shares (ticker: RIVN) were downgraded from Buy to Hold by the firm late Tuesday morning. A price target of $28 was halved to $14.

Shares have fallen as a result of the move. In recent trading, Rivian stock dropped 4.2% to $12.87. Similarly, the Nasdaq CompositeCOMP –0.16% was down 0.3% and the S&P 500SPX –0.18% declined 0.2%.

According to Narayan, "We believe margins will remain constrained in the near term due to a lack of catalysts to accelerate profitability."

Investors have been concerned about profitability for some time. Around 24,000 vehicles were produced by Rivian in 2022 at an estimated cost of $8.6 billion. According to Wall Street, 50,000 units will be manufactured in 2023 for about $10 billion.

The amount Rivian spends on its electric vehicles exceeds that of other start-ups. After all its spending is accounted for against sales, the company is expected to have about $6 billion in cash at the end of 2022.

There are some positives Narayan sees down the road. It will not be until 2026 before Rivian releases its next-generation vehicle platform, called R2. Nevertheless, it isn't enough to keep him from being rated Hold.

The number of analysts rating the company as Buy has increased by 58% since his ratings were cut. Stocks in the S&P 500 have an average Buy-rating ratio of 2.20. The Buy-rating ratio for Rivian peaked in late 2021 at about 67%.

Analysts expect Rivian shares to reach $26 on average. Over the last six months, that's down from about $52.

In the past 12 months, Rivian stock has dropped 67%. Investors have also lost enthusiasm for high-growth stocks that aren't yet profitable, such as Rivian.

Most of the news lately hasn't been as positive as Rivian investors would have liked.

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