Rivian secures up to $5 billion from Volkswagen, shares soar 40% – CNBC

The EV maker reported a loss of $1.45 billion during the first quarter of this year, as it retooled its plant in Normal, Illinois, to launch updated versions of its R1T pickup and R1S SUV EVs ahead of its next-generation vehicles in 2026.
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Leaving Soon, just not soon enough
1 year ago

As the marketplace goes electric more and more over the next decade how is Illinois going to make up for all the Gas Tax revenue lost?
Gas taxes are so high there is an economic incentive to go electric.

Sand
1 year ago

If I were going to buy an EV, and I would if the range were close to 500 miles, I wouldn’t buy a Rivian. They are extremely unattractive vehicles. Unlike Rivian, some of the Tesla products and the new Blazer EV are really nice looking products.

Ex Illini
1 year ago

Rivian got what it needed to keep going. Volkswagen wants to spend $5B on a business that loses big money on every vehicle they sell, and in a country where demand for EVs is waning. It’s a large bet. Watch for Governor Carnival Barker to trumpet the news and pronounce Volkswagen vehicles as “the Super best”.

debtsor
1 year ago

Germany is de-industrializing in real time with their insane climate goals. So it would make sense that VW would invest in whatever global automotive assets it can find, at whatever price. https://www.forbes.com/sites/jimvinoski/2024/02/29/german-deindustrialization-is-a-wake-up-call-for-us-manufacturers/ German Deindustrialization Is A Wake-Up Call For U.S. Manufacturers For generations, Germany has been a manufacturing powerhouse. The country was in the vanguard of the industrial revolution in the nineteenth century, establishing dominant positions in electrical components manufacturing and chemical production. Devastated by WWII, with the help of the Marshall plan the country quickly rebuilt its manufacturing base afterwards. It remained a top exporter of manufactured goods even… Read more »

Harry Loungabow
1 year ago

VW has made a bad investment Rivian is not
And never will be profitable in Illinois.
The only way to make it profitable is to move it out of this state.

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