Lucid has gained delivery momentum after driving through a number of production hiccups.
Accelerating production efficiency is important, but Lucid's midsize platform launch is key for investors.
The midsize platform will open the doors to higher volume, improved scale, and better unit economics.
Lucid Group (NASDAQ: LCID) has given some investors reason to cheer as it finally managed to drive beyond early supply chain and production speed bumps to more consistent production and deliveries. In fact, Lucid achieved its eighth consecutive quarter of record deliveries in the fourth quarter of 2025, driven by improved manufacturing execution and the production ramp-up of Lucid's Gravity SUV electric vehicle (EV).
Lucid's strategy to drive profitability revolves around four key components, but really only one matters for investors right now.
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Image source: Lucid Investor Day presentation.
Sure, all four of the above points have massive potential for the young EV maker, and there's no doubt some of its focus should be on the long term. However, for investors buying into that long-term vision, the first two (starting from the left) are more important, while the latter two should be on the back burner for now.
For Lucid, it appears 2026 will be focused on maximizing and optimizing the existing Lucid Air while continuing to ramp up the production of the newer Gravity. The truth is, compared to rival Rivian Automotive (NASDAQ: RIVN), Lucid is a step behind in maximizing current vehicle production to take steps toward gross profitability. Rivian, while currently focused on launching the R2, has made significant progress on gross profitability on its existing vehicles already.
In fact, Rivian achieved its first full-year of positive gross profit in 2025, reversing the prior year's $1.2 billion gross loss.

LCID Gross Profit (TTM) data by YCharts
Let's give Lucid a little more credit than it has earned, as it's on its way to optimizing and improving the efficiency of the Air sedan and the Gravity SUV, which should improve throughout the year. The most important of the four-pronged strategy is absolutely Lucid's midsize platform, which is targeted for a launch late this year.
Lucid's midsize platform has been engineered in its entirety from the ground up, in hopes that the brand can keep delivering technologically advanced vehicles at a much more accessible price point starting below $50,000 -- roughly the average price of a new vehicle in the U.S., regardless of powertrain. The midsize platform has been specifically engineered for better unit economics, enabling the transition from high-cost luxury production to profitable high-volume models.
"Our efficiency leadership directly translates into cost leadership with our Midsize platform," said Emad Dlala, Senior Vice President of Engineering and Digital at Lucid, in a press release. "Smaller batteries, fewer parts, and tighter integration mean lower cost, better performance, and a superior customer experience, all at the same time."
Lucid is currently working out the kinks in its production, but has taken substantial steps forward, highlighted by eight consecutive quarters of record deliveries. Now Lucid needs to prove to investors, far before it's a viable long-term investment, that it can take steps toward launching its midsize platform more flawlessly, while continuing to remove costs without sacrificing performance and technology that Lucid constantly claims are industry-leading.
Lucid needs to tackle major challenges, including its heavy cash burn and production inefficiencies, and show investors it can consistently improve gross margin as its rival Rivian has. The next year and a half will be crucial for taking these steps, and savvy investors should watch closely.
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Daniel Miller has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.