SeaGeo
Well-Known Member
No idea.I doubt any 3rd party would ever possibility with a closed network like Rivian (Tesla) but I havent looked too much into tesla extended warranties. Do those exist?
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No idea.I doubt any 3rd party would ever possibility with a closed network like Rivian (Tesla) but I havent looked too much into tesla extended warranties. Do those exist?
All that matters is shareholders - you can't tell them... we're going to lose $20K per EV for 3+ years.That's different than charging customers you already tried pissed off.
And they're trying to salvage it. Obviously.
While I understand your point, I don’t quite agree for this reason. If Rivian really could not afford to take the loss, ever, that would have meant they just wrote their death sentence by reversing the price hike to save face with their pre-order holders which would be a decision that is monumentally worse than the original decision to set a price hike.It's interesting to see responses suggesting they can just eat the lost profits. Clearly they decided they can't do that, or they wouldn't have made the decision in the first place. This isn't my opinion, it's theirs.
This wasn't a last second decision, they planned, calculated, and decided a 20% increase to their one product was required immediately before they had begun significant deliveries. They knew there would be negative feedback but had decided it was still necessary going forward. Of course, they didn't expect so much negative feedback and such a large hit to their reservations, reputation, & stocks.
This isn't pro/con the initial decision, the company, etc.. It's just very much the same as any business, if your accountant comes to you saying "ran the numbers many times and we have to increase product cost by 20%" you say nope, won't do it.. the accountant is going to find another way to make it work.
Maybe part of this is they kill bonuses, maybe they kill the Forever fund, maybe it never influences the building process. But if they thought they could eat the loss on preorders they wouldn't have taken the risk of raising prices on them in the first place.
You cannot really use the 2021 numbers for Model S/X, they pulled them from the market for the rework, had issues getting it done and then with supply chain so really had none to sell. I don’t think they even had a Model X to sell in 2021 and most of those 2021 numbers are Model S.I think that we may have all been thinking about this wrong. Maybe this wasn’t about how much money they were going to lose, but reducing the number of orders. Rivian was never going to become profitable selling the R1T and R1S. It was always about mass selling their R2 vehicles, which have not yet been announced. The error that Rivian made was setting a low ball price for the R1T and R1S and too many people preordered. They needed to cull a certain amount of orders to guarantee that by the time the Georgia plant is open, they can concentrate on the R2 vehicles and not still dealing with the backlog of R1 vehicles, which they don’t make money on.
Below is a chart of the number of Tesla sales by model.
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Not completely clear to me, but I expect the Normal plant is 2 years away from running at design rates? Plus Rivian is building a new factory in Georgia, hope to start a battery factory soon, launching new vehicles. So really hard to see positive cash flow for 5 years or so, just too many startups, capital expenditures, etc that add costs that ramp up faster than sales will ramp up.….. how are they going to make up the projected loss?
You can also factor in the short If they felt they could absorb the loss I don't see why they would have made the decision in the first place. So how are they going to find ways to make up the difference?
Another victim of the Great Resignation.Fire the Comms staff? Oh sorry I forgot, they don’t have one!
100%They make up the loss by being a good company and not screwing the customers. As happy customers, we return for more vehicles, we recommend friends to Rivian, etc. I don't see a practical way to make up those losses short-term.
Looking at the Model S/X numbers leads me to conclude that leasing could be part of Rivian's answer. Perpetual cash flow that isn't tied directly to the pre-order selling price. Disclaimer: I've never leased a vehicle so I definitely don't know what I'm talking about.I think that we may have all been thinking about this wrong. Maybe this wasn’t about how much money they were going to lose, but reducing the number of orders. Rivian was never going to become profitable selling the R1T and R1S. It was always about mass selling their R2 vehicles, which have not yet been announced. The error that Rivian made was setting a low ball price for the R1T and R1S and too many people preordered. They needed to cull a certain amount of orders to guarantee that by the time the Georgia plant is open, they can concentrate on the R2 vehicles and not still dealing with the backlog of R1 vehicles, which they don’t make money on.
Below is a chart of the number of Tesla sales by model.
![]()