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Next-Tesla Tag Sends Rivian Above $100 Billion Without Sales

Rivian has reached a market value of $90 billion two days after its initial public offering, drawing comparisons to Tesla.

Next-Tesla Tag Sends Rivian Above $100 Billion Without Sales
Rivian R1T electric pickup trucks drive through Times Square during the company's IPO outside the Nasdaq MarketSite in New York, U.S. (Photographer: Bing Guan/Bloomberg)

Rivian Automotive Inc. reached a market value of over $100 billion two days after its initial public offering, drawing comparisons to Tesla Inc.

But there are stark differences: When Tesla went public in 2010, the Elon Musk-led firm disclosed $93 million in revenue and losses far below the $1 billion Rivian reported for the first half. What’s more, Tesla’s initial market capitalization was about $2 billion and didn’t reach $90 billion until 2020.

Eleven years later, Rivian is the world’s fifth-largest automaker by market cap having delivered only a few electric vehicles to customers. After gaining 29% in their first day of trading, Rivian shares closed up 22% Thursday, vaulting its valuation past General Motors Co.

“Along with the IPO of Lucid (LCID) the race to be the ‘next Tesla’ is well underway and increasingly happening in public markets,” Ben Laidler, eToro global market strategist, wrote in a note. 

NameMarket Cap in billion USD
Tesla1,068
Toyota292.1
VW140.2
Daimler107
Rivian104.9
  

“Rivian’s valuation makes it a legitimate option for institutional investors who have previously only had Tesla to play the electric-vehicle space,” Nicholas Colas, co-founder of DataTrek Research, wrote in a note. Colas said some investors cycle through new companies as they go public, selling the “‘old’ name and replacing it with the ‘new.’”

For the Rivian believers, the backing of Amazon.com Inc. and Ford Motor Co. makes the company a compelling buy. “Investors reacted with excitement to its backing from Amazon and its R1T pick-up truck which has earned rave reviews since its recent launch,” said AJ Bell investment director Russ Mould. 

Traditional automakers are trying to attract investors’ attention with their own EV development.

“General Motors is so undervalued as we start this wonderful period we’re in because we invested over three, four years ago in electric vehicles,” Mary Barra said in the The New York Times DealBook conference.

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.