Electric vehicle maker Rivian Automotive on Tuesday reported a loss for the second quarter that was narrower than expected and raised its production guidance for the full year.
It now expects to build about 52,000 vehicles in 2023, more than twice the number it made in 2022 and up from its previous production guidance of 50,000 vehicles.
Rivian delivered 12,640 vehicles during the second quarter, up 59% from its first-quarter total and well above the 4,467 EVs it delivered in the second quarter of 2022. It produced 13,992 vehicles in the quarter, up from 9,395 in the first quarter of 2023 and 4,401 in the second quarter of 2022.
Here are the key numbers from Rivian’s report, with consensus analyst estimates as reported by Refinitiv:
- Adjusted loss per share: $1.08 vs. $1.41 expected.
- Revenue: $1.12 billion vs. $1 billion expected.
Rivian’s net loss for the quarter was $1.2 billion, or $1.27 per share. A year ago, Rivian reported a net loss of $1.71 billion, or $1.89 per share. On an adjusted basis, Rivian reported a loss of $1.02 billion, or $1.08 per share.
Revenue in the second quarter rose to $1.12 billion from $364 million in the same period in 2022. Rivian’s second-quarter revenue included $34 million from the sale of regulatory credits.
Rivian’s gross loss, or negative gross profit, was $412 million in the quarter, down from $704 million a year ago and a roughly $35,000 per vehicle improvement from the first quarter of 2023. Increased production, with the related economies of scale, and “our continued efforts to drive material cost reductions through commercial negotiations and engineering design change” drove the improvement, it said.
Rivian reiterated that it expects to reach a positive gross profit sometime in 2024.
The EV maker had $10.2 billion in cash remaining as of June 30, down from $11.78 billion as of March 31. It also had about $1.1 billion in credit lines available as of quarter end, for total liquidity of $11.3 billion. Capital expenditures in the second quarter were $255 million, versus $359 million in the same period last year.
For the full year, Rivian now expects about $1.7 billion in capex, down from $2 billion in its prior guidance.
Rivian took a number of steps earlier this year to slow spending and bolster its balance sheet, including a 6% staff reduction in February and a $1.3 billion sale of convertible notes in March. The company also delayed the launch of its upcoming smaller R2 vehicle platform to 2026, from 2025.
Rivian produced roughly 23,400 vehicles in the first half of 2023. The company is currently building the R1T pickup, the R1S SUV and a series of electric delivery vans for Amazon at its factory in Normal, Illinois.
ivermectin 6 mg tablets – tegretol generic tegretol pills
amoxil price – purchase amoxicillin generic ipratropium over the counter
cheap zithromax 500mg – buy tindamax pills order bystolic pill
generic omnacortil – cheap azipro 500mg order prometrium 200mg online cheap
neurontin 800mg over the counter – buy itraconazole pill order itraconazole 100mg online
purchase lasix online – betamethasone 20 gm generic3 betamethasone over the counter
buy augmentin 1000mg generic – buy ketoconazole 200 mg without prescription duloxetine price
order amoxiclav without prescription – augmentin 625mg oral cymbalta drug
buy generic semaglutide – purchase vardenafil sale purchase periactin pills
tizanidine oral – oral tizanidine 2mg purchase microzide sale
generic cialis india – viagra for sale online sildenafil india
viagra 100mg price – cialis 10mg oral cialis generic name
buy cenforce 100mg pills – glycomet us metformin tablet
atorvastatin 20mg sale – how to buy zestril buy zestril 2.5mg online
buy omeprazole 20mg pill – buy prilosec generic tenormin 50mg drug
how to buy methylprednisolone – buy pregabalin 150mg generic order aristocort 4mg
cytotec 200mcg tablet – order generic xenical 60mg diltiazem where to buy
zovirax 800mg canada – order zovirax 400mg for sale buy crestor 20mg generic
domperidone tablet – order cyclobenzaprine online cheap order flexeril 15mg pill