Where Will Rivian Be in 10 Years?

Source The Motley Fool

Rivian Automotive (NASDAQ: RIVN) has a very exciting future ahead of it. While sales growth should be lackluster in 2025, next year everything will change. Starting in early 2026, the company expects to begin shipments of three new mass-market vehicles. Looking even further ahead, the company's aggressive investments in software and autonomous driving could give it a huge advantage against other electric vehicle (EV) stocks, even well-financed peers like Tesla.

Where will Rivian be by 2035? Get ready for an exciting forecast.

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Sales growth will surge thanks to 3 new models

By far the most exciting thing that will happen to Rivian in the near future will be the launch of three new models: The R2, R3, and R3X. These mass market models will make Rivian's products affordable to tens of millions of new buyers. All three are expected to debut for under $50,000, targeting the mid-sized SUV market that represents one of the largest and fastest-growing segments of the vehicle market.

I expect the R2 to launch first, with management guiding for first deliveries sometime in early 2026. But as with most vehicle launch timelines, don't be surprised to see meaningful deliveries ramp until late 2026, or even 2027, when the R3 and R3X should see production begin to ramp.

Regardless of whether these vehicles scale deliveries in 2026 or 2027, however, this catalyst will change the game for Rivian. Tesla didn't launch its affordable Model Y and Model 3 vehicles until 2019 and 2020 respectively. It took years to fully scale production and bring it to other geographies. But today, those two vehicles account for more than 90% of Tesla's automobile sales. The importance of the Model Y and Model 3 launches for Tesla cannot be understated. The same may prove true for Rivian's trios of new mass market launches.

But beyond these catalysts, the most exciting thing that will drive Rivian's value won't be model introductions, but software development.

Racks of servers in a data center.

Image source: Getty Images.

Software could make Rivian a household name by 2035

It's expensive to scale up an electric vehicle business from scratch. It takes billions of dollars, long stretches of time, and the right partners. That's why last year's capital infusion from Volkswagen -- an investment that could ultimately scale up to $5 billion -- was so critical for Rivian. It gave it the capital necessary to get its mass market models to market. But the reason the deal was forged wasn't about vehicles at all. It was about software.

"What we realized over the last few years is the enormous difficulty for incumbent existing auto manufacturers to develop their own full stack software," Rivian's CEO told investors at the time. "I really deeply believe this is one of the hardest things for existing manufacturers to do just because of the way historically the electronics and software space has evolved within automotive."

Volkswagen can now access Rivian's proprietary software stack in the design of its vehicles, potentially saving it huge sums of money, not to mention shortening lead times. It's a win-win for both automakers, but also a huge vote of confidence in Rivian's software offering. The company has claimed that it is superior to existing architectures, with the ability to provide better performance for 25% to 40% less cost. Volkswagen's investment adds credence to these claims, meaning Rivian's future vehicles could perform better than the competition at a lower price.

After achieving positive gross margins over the last two quarters for the first time in company history, scaling the business further with controlled costs could help Rivian become a household name like Tesla. While most eyes will be on its hardware offerings, Rivian's true potential could be in its software. Volkswagen's investment, which could reach $5 billion total, is nearly one-third of Rivian's current market cap, indicating its potential value.

In five years, Rivian should have millions of additional cars on the road thanks to its mass market vehicles. But in 10 years, it could be a leading software provider for the entire industry, or at least any manufacturers that don't specialize in their own tech stacks like Tesla.

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Ryan Vanzo has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Tesla. The Motley Fool recommends Volkswagen Ag. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
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