According to Reuters, Rivian Automotive has raised its 2026 vehicle delivery forecast by 53%, targeting 62,000–67,000 units — up from prior expectations of 13,400 R2 deliveries alone and a broader consensus estimate of 64,130 total vehicles, per Visible Alpha data.
R2 SUV drives aggressive growth outlook
The revised forecast hinges on the imminent launch of Rivian’s R2 electric SUV, an affordable model set to debut in the second quarter of 2026. Priced starting at nearly $45,000, the R2 directly targets volume buyers and positions Rivian as a competitor to Tesla’s best-selling Model Y. The automaker will first release a high-performance, dual-motor variant equipped with the largest available battery pack, followed by additional trims later in the year.
The R2 represents a strategic pivot from Rivian’s premium R1 family — which includes the R1S and R1T — toward higher-volume, lower-cost production. This shift aligns with industry-wide efforts to counter slowing EV demand following the expiration of the U.S. federal $7,500 EV tax credit and policy changes under the Trump administration. Rivian’s move mirrors similar affordability-focused initiatives announced this year by other major automakers.
Capital intensity and profitability challenges
Despite the optimistic delivery outlook, Rivian remains unprofitable. Its preparations for the R2 launch — including scaling manufacturing capacity and expanding in-house autonomous driving capabilities — are expected to be capital intensive. The company reported financial results that beat Wall Street targets, but did not disclose updated net loss figures or cash burn rates in the source material.
Analysts at Piper Sandler emphasized execution risk, noting:
“For the stock itself, nothing matters more than a timely launch for the R2 SUV, and in this regard, Rivian remains essentially on track.” — Piper Sandler analysts
The firm’s assessment underscores investor focus on operational milestones over near-term earnings.
Market reaction and valuation impact
Investor sentiment responded strongly: Rivian’s shares surged 25% on the Friday following the forecast update. If sustained, the rally could add more than $4 billion to Rivian’s market value, which stood at $17.16 billion prior to the announcement. That follows a 48% stock gain in the prior year — largely fueled by anticipation of the R2’s introduction.
The company’s share performance contrasts sharply with broader EV sector volatility. While many peers face margin pressure and declining order books, Rivian’s targeted pricing and product sequencing appear to have rekindled confidence among institutional investors. Notably, the R2’s projected 53% contribution to 2026 delivery growth is underpinned by concrete timing (Q2 2026 launch), price point ($45,000 entry), and scalable platform architecture — all cited explicitly in the Reuters report.
Source: Reuters
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










