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Rivian Automotive said it came up just short of its 2022 production target of 25,000 units due to supply-chain issues and a slow ramp at its assembly plant in Normal, Ill.
The EV startup on Tuesday said it produced 24,337 vehicles in its first full year of production, comprised of R1T pickups, R1S crossovers and EDV delivery vans for Amazon. Rivian does not break down production by model.
Rivian had originally forecast 2022 output at 50,000 vehicles before a lack of critical parts caused repeated shutdowns of its assembly line and a re-assessment of its potential in mid-2022. The Irvine, Calif.-based automaker delivered 20,332 vehicles last year, leaving about 4,000 in inventory.
For the fourth quarter, Rivian produced 10,020 vehicles after adding a second production shift on improving parts supply and delivered 8,054. In its third-quarter earnings report, the company said it had a backlog of more than 100,000 preorders for the R1T and R1S, in addition to a multi-year Amazon order for 100,000 vans.
The 2022 production miss capped a difficult year for one of the world’s most promising EV startups, which briefly had a higher market valuation than Ford Motor Co. when the startup began trading on the Nasdaq exchange. Rivian’s stock price is down by 87 percent since its November 2021 initial public offering.
Rivian’s market value is now below $15 billion, from a high of well over $100 billion just after its IPO, Reuters reported.
In a letter to employees Tuesday, CEO RJ Scaringe praised the company’s workforce for griding through the setbacks.
“There were many headwinds in 2022,” Scaringe said. “Considering the supply chain issues that caused the plant to close for 20 days and shut down early on 50 days in the last 12 months — and the inclement weather that forced us to close for an additional 5 days — our team stayed focused and worked through the challenges together.”
Although Rivian did not meet its formal output goal, it managed to get 25,051 vehicles off the assembly line, Scaringe said. He explained that 714 vehicles were still in the process of full completion as they were awaiting parts, software validation, wheel alignment, charging and other finishing touches.
Rivian shares slipped 5.9 percent to $17.34 in trading prior to the production announcement, which was made after the market close. In after hours trading, shares were mostly unchanged.
Baird Equity Research said it had forecast Rivian’s fourth-quarter deliveries at 10,700 vehicles and attributed the miss to supply-chain issues. “We forecast a significant uptick in production for 2023 as the factory in Normal continues to ramp.”
Like other EV makers, supply-chain disruptions have pressured Rivian, which also shelved a plan in December to build delivery vans in Europe with Mercedes-Benz, Reuters said Tuesday. Rivian earlier pushed back the production startup of its smaller R2 vehicle family to 2026 at the company’s planned $5 billion plant in Georgia.