By Akash Sriram and Abhirup Roy
(Reuters) -Rivian Automotive surpassed third-quarter income expectations on Tuesday, fueled by robust deliveries as U.S. shoppers rushed to seize a federal tax incentive on electrical automobile purchases earlier than its expiry.
Shares of the Irvine, California-based firm rose greater than 4% after the bell.
The corporate mentioned final month it delivered 13,201 automobiles within the third quarter, up 32% from the yr earlier, however lowered the mid level of its full-year forecast marginally to round 42,500 models, because it braced for decrease demand from the lapse of the $7,500 federal tax credit score.
“October goes to be a little bit of a cool month, since you had a lot pull ahead. However within the fullness of time, we predict it (demand) seems the identical method we thought it appeared earlier than,” CEO RJ Scaringe instructed Reuters.
Early indicators counsel U.S. EV gross sales slowed in October after a record-setting September, market analysis agency Edmunds mentioned, including that common costs rose to just about a document $65,021, indicating that October patrons had been extra dedicated to EV adoption than bargain-hunting.
Rivian additionally expects partial aid from the Trump administration’s 3.75% tariff offset for U.S.-made EVs, which ought to assist ease value pressures.
Tariff prices on newly constructed automobiles are anticipated to fall to some hundred {dollars} per automobile as coverage adjustments take impact, down from about $2,000 at the moment, Chief Monetary Officer Claire McDonough mentioned.
Rivian’s income for the third quarter stood at $1.56 billion, in contrast with analysts’ common estimate of $1.5 billion, in line with information compiled by LSEG.
The corporate posted an adjusted internet lack of 65 cents per share, smaller than the estimate of 72 cents per share.
Rivian mentioned it stays on monitor to start out manufacturing of its extra reasonably priced R2 SUV within the first half of subsequent yr.
Final month, the corporate laid off about 4.5% of its workforce, or greater than 600 staff, and agreed to settle a 2022 class-action lawsuit for $250 million because it focuses on the launch of R2.
Additionally on Tuesday, Rivian unveiled Thoughts Robotics, an industrial robotics startup that it arrange this month with $110 million in exterior funding.
(Reporting by Akash Sriram in Bengaluru and Abhirup Roy in San Francisco; Enhancing by Shilpi Majumdar)
