Most companies don't cut jobs the same month they launch their biggest product. Rivian just did.
The electric truck maker started delivering the R2 last week. Days later, it began laying off hundreds of workers.
A Launch And A Layoff In The Same Week
The cuts hit less than 2% of Rivian's staff. Most sit in service and customer teams.
The company called it a reshuffle. It said the goal is to "profitably scale."
Rivian had 15,232 workers at the end of last year. The Wall Street Journal first reported the new cuts.
The timing is the real story. The R2 is meant to save the company.
Rivian wants the R2 to change what it is. Today it is a niche brand selling pricey trucks.
The R2 should make it a mass-market name, more like Tesla. That shift has to work.
The Money Problem
Rivian badly needs the money. Last year it lost $3.6 billion, and it has never turned a yearly profit.
It delivered about 42,000 vehicles in that stretch. Early this year, it lost roughly $6,000 on every vehicle it sold.
That math is brutal. The more Rivian sells, the more it loses, like a store paying people to take goods off the shelf.
The R2 is the planned way out. A cheaper SUV sold in big numbers could finally tip the company into profit.
Investors have heard the profit promise before. This time the R2 has to deliver.
We unpack what moves like this mean for the EV market every morning in Market Briefs - five minutes a day, plus a free investing masterclass when you join.
A Harder Road For EVs
The whole EV market got tougher this year. The $7,500 federal tax credit for buying an EV is gone.
That was a Trump administration change. Without it, these cars are a harder sell.
This also isn't Rivian's first round of cuts. It let go of more than 600 workers last October.
That earlier round was about 4.5% of staff. It mostly hit marketing, operations, and sales teams.
So job cuts are becoming a pattern. Each one chases the same goal: stop the bleeding.
Why Investors Are Watching
Rivian burns cash with every quarter. Each loss chips away at the money it has saved up.
So the R2 has to sell fast and wide. That is the whole bet.
Cutting service and customer staff carries its own risk. Those teams keep new owners happy.
Trim too much, and early R2 buyers could feel it. Word of mouth matters for a young brand.
Rivian says the move makes it leaner for the fight ahead. Investors will judge that by the sales numbers.
Worth Noting
Rivian has pinned its whole plan on the R2. The launch and the layoff landing in the same week sends a mixed signal.
It shows how thin the margin for error has become. The next few months of R2 sales will say a lot about its future.
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