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Is Rivian Stock a Buy After Its Recent Pullback?

  • Rivian's third-quarter deliveries rose 32% year over year and beat expectations.

  • Management narrowed full-year delivery guidance, implying a softer fourth quarter.

  • The stock's valuation looks more reasonable after the drop.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Rivian Automotive ›

Rivian Automotive (NASDAQ: RIVN) slid again this week after the electric vehicle maker reported quarterly deliveries and trimmed its full-year outlook. The stock's move follows a short run-up into the report and comes as the market reassesses how much demand pulled forward ahead of tax-credit changes will weigh on year-end results.

Rivian, which designs and builds the R1T pickup, the R1S SUV, and commercial delivery vans, has a valuation priced for rapid growth for years to come. So investors have good reason to look at any clues they can get about sales potential. Unfortunately, the company's decision to lower the midpoint of its guidance range suggests the second half of the year won't have the zing to it that some bulls were probably hoping for.

A stock price falling sharply and then rising sharply.

Image source: Getty Images.

Rivian delivered 13,201 vehicles in the third quarter, up 32% from a year ago and above the consensus analyst estimate. Production lagged, coming in at 10,720 units.

Alongside the update, management narrowed 2025 delivery guidance to 41,500 to 43,500 units. The midpoint of this range falls below the midpoint of its previous guidance for 40,000 to 46,000, suggesting that management believes the high end of the prior range is no longer possible -- despite a stronger-than-expected third quarter. Additionally, it implies a relatively light fourth quarter compared with last year's 14,183 deliveries.

The guidance change arrived as U.S. incentive dynamics shifted. The $7,500 federal tax credit for electric vehicles expired on Oct. 1, removing a key price lever that had supported demand across the industry. That change, combined with higher tariffs on imported parts, adds cost and demand uncertainty for the rest of the year. Rivian set Nov. 4 for its third-quarter earnings release, when investors will get a more comprehensive read on order trends and margin progress.

Financially, the company is still working toward sustained profitability after achieving its first positive gross profit in the fourth quarter of 2024. In that report, Founder and CEO RJ Scaringe said, "This quarter we achieved positive gross profit and removed $31,000 in automotive cost of goods sold per vehicle delivered in Q4 2024 relative to Q4 2023," emphasizing that cost work is foundational for the upcoming, lower-priced R2 line. Management also guided for "modest" gross profit in 2025 -- a useful marker for expectations.

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