Rivian Q3 earnings

Electric adventure-vehicle maker Rivian (RIVN) reported third quarter results that beat expectations, in addition to upping its production forecast for the year, and narrowing its full-year loss projection. Rivian stock is trading slightly higher in after-hours trading following release of the results.

For the quarter, Rivian reported revenue of $1.34 billion vs $1.31 billion estimated, with an adjusted EPS loss of $1.19 vs $1.32 expected. That revenue figure represents a 19.6% jump from Q2’s $1.12 billion and 150% more than the $536 million reported a year ago. On an adjusted EBITDA basis, Rivian reported a loss of $942 million vs $1.04 billion expected, which is also narrower than the $1.307 billion loss reported a year ago.

From a production standpoint, Rivian boosted its full-year forecast to 54,000 from 52,000 units. Its prior forecast of 52,000 units was lifted earlier in the year from 50,000.

“Due to the progress experienced on our production lines, the ramp of our in-house motor line, and the supply chain outlook, we are increasing our 2023 production guidance to 54,000 total units,” the company said in its Q3 shareholder letter.

Rivian also narrowed its full-year adjusted EBITDA loss to $4.0 billion from $4.2 billion, and revealed its 2023 capex (capital expenditure) guidance was reduced to $1.1 billion.

Finally, Rivian said it is no longer subject to exclusively selling its EDV (electric delivery van) to Amazon, which is a shareholder in Rivian. Rivian still plans to build 100,000 delivery vans for Amazon, per an earlier agreement.

Last month, Rivian reported deliveries of 15,564 EV trucks, more than the 14,973 estimated per Bloomberg. Production also topped estimates at 16,304 vehicles.

Rivian shares are down 11% since then and 45% in the past year while the S&P 500 is up over 14% for the year. Shares of EV makers and legacy automakers like GM and Ford have also been hit hard, with the companies reporting waning or “evolving” EV demand.

CEO RJ Scaringe stands outside the startup Rivian Automotive's electric vehicle factory in Normal, Illinois, U.S. April 11, 2022. Picture taken April 11, 2022.  REUTERS/Kamil KrzaczynskiCEO RJ Scaringe stands outside the startup Rivian Automotive's electric vehicle factory in Normal, Illinois, U.S. April 11, 2022. Picture taken April 11, 2022.  REUTERS/Kamil Krzaczynski

CEO RJ Scaringe stands outside Rivian Automotive’s electric vehicle factory in Normal, Ill., April 11, 2022. (Kamil Krzaczynski/REUTERS) (Kamil Krzaczynski / reuters)

Last month Ford (F) paused $12 billion worth of investments in its EV projects until “capacity” is needed. Ford said in its earnings report that US EV buyers were “unwilling to pay premiums for [EVs] over gas or hybrid vehicles, sharply compressing EV prices and profitability.” Fellow Big Three automaker GM (GM) pushed back its EV truck expansion in late October, noting “evolving EV demand” as the main reason for slowing its EV truck volumes.

Even Tesla (TSLA) isn’t immune to the EV demand story, with the automaker delaying construction of its upcoming Gigafactory in Mexico due to concerns about global economic conditions stemming from rising interest rates.

That being said, Rivian and its lifestyle-oriented trucks might be an outlier in the EV landscape.

Rivian’s aforementioned Q3 deliveries were up 23% sequentially compared to Q2, even as the company raised prices after selling out its initial cheaper orders. Unlike Ford and GM, Rivian is targeting coastal and higher-income buyers who are more immune to rising prices and higher interest rates compared to the broader population.

Pras Subramanian is a reporter for Yahoo Finance. You can follow him on Twitter and on Instagram.

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