Why Lucid and Rivian Stocks Rose Briefly and Tesla Topped $1 Trillion Again on Friday

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Friday is looking like it's going to be a busy day for investors in electric vehicles, with Rivian Automotive (NASDAQ: RIVN) and Lucid Group (NASDAQ: LCID) both having reported earnings last night, and Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) stock reacting to the news from its rivals.

Earlier today, Lucid stock was up 6%, though around noon ET it was negative on the day. Similarly, Rivian was up 4.8% earlier but had dipped down to a 0.80% gain. Surprisingly, Tesla stock -- the only one of the three that did not report earnings last night -- was up 6.7% as its market cap crossed the $1 trillion mark for the first time since 2022.

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Rivian Q3 earnings

Perhaps Rivian's intraday pullback shouldn't be such a surprise, given how badly the company performed in the quarter.

In Q3, Rivian reported only $874 million in quarterly sales, which was less than Wall Street expected, and a 35% decline year over year -- not a great look for a supposed growth stock. Worse, Rivian's "earnings" for the quarter looked a whole lot more like losses. Analysts had forecast a $0.92-per-share loss for the electric truck maker, but Rivian managed to underperform even that pessimistic prognosis, losing $1.44.

Now, the good news is that Rivian CEO R.J. Scaringe says his company is still on track for positive gross profit for the fourth quarter of 2024, and hopes to boost revenue per unit sold in Q4, while reducing the cost of those units. The bad news is that one way Rivian wants to increase revenue per unit is by charging more for those units (i.e., electric trucks and SUVs). And raising prices in a market where EVs are already struggling to win sales may not be the best strategy for driving growth.

At the same time, Rivian says it will be depending on the sale of regulatory credits to provide the rest of its increased revenue per unit. That might work in Q4, in the waning days of the Biden administration. It's perhaps less likely to work in the future, under a Trump administration that has promised to "rescind all unspent funds" from the Inflation Reduction Act, perhaps including funds earmarked to pay for tax credits on EV sales.

Long story short, Rivian's revenue is shrinking and its plans for growing revenue in Q4 and after Q4 look iffy. When you consider furthermore that cash burn over the first three quarters of 2024 reached $4.5 billion, implying full-year negative free cash flow of $6 billion, things are not looking great for this Tesla competitor right now.