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Rivian Gets R2 Update as Wall Street Keeps Cautious Tone
17 May 2026
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Rivian Gets R2 Update as Wall Street Keeps Cautious Tone

New York, May 17, 2026, 14:03 (EDT)

  • Rivian slipped 5.03% to finish Friday at $13.79, with trading volume near 41.7 million shares. Shares settled about 3% under the previous Friday’s close.
  • Rivian’s R2 configurator launched May 15, letting buyers see prices for the lower-cost SUV lineup.
  • Tesla bumped up the U.S. price for its Model Y Performance to $57,990 on Saturday, so it now matches the R2 Performance launch price.

Rivian Automotive (RIVN) shares fell 5% Friday, ending the session at $13.79 on heavy volume. After-hours trading was flat. The move came as the EV maker nears a high-stakes launch for its smaller R2 SUV.

Rivian opened the R2 online configurator on May 15, lining that up with a period when small-cap and tech shares fell out of favor with investors. Reservation holders now see a more direct move from interest to order. Pricing comes in at $57,990 for the Performance trim, with Premium and Standard models later at $53,990 and $48,490.

R2 is key for Rivian shares, as the new model is supposed to take the company past its R1 truck and SUV and get into more of the U.S. crossover market. Reuters said in March that Rivian is aiming for 62,000 to 67,000 vehicle deliveries in 2026, with the R2 making up about 23,000 units.

Rivian CEO RJ Scaringe said on the Q1 earnings call that the R2 is a “game-changer” for the company, targeting the five-passenger SUV and crossover market. CFO Claire McDonough described the beginning of R2 production and internal deliveries as a “landmark moment,” saying assembling the model in Normal, Illinois, will support fixed-cost absorption by distributing factory costs across more vehicles. EVwire The Motley Fool

Tesla bumped up the U.S. price of its Model Y Performance AWD by $500 to $57,990 over the weekend, matching Rivian’s R2 Performance launch trim. The company also increased prices on two premium Model Y variants by $1,000 each but did not change pricing for its lower-cost models.

Rivian shares struggled as the market slid. U.S. stocks dropped hard Friday when crude and Treasury yields climbed, with the S&P 500 losing 1.2%, the Dow down 1.1%, and the Nasdaq falling 1.5%. “There’s a realization that the market had gotten way ahead of itself,” Kenny Polcari, chief market strategist at Slatestone Wealth, told Reuters. Reuters

Nasdaq edged down 0.1% for the week, while the Russell 2000 lost 2.4%, AP reported. That was relevant for Rivian since shares of profitless growth names tend to move more with shifts in risk appetite and rate outlooks than with quarterly earnings.

Rivian’s quarterly numbers point to why execution is still a key issue for investors. Revenue for the first quarter came in at $1.381 billion, up from $1.240 billion the year before. Net loss narrowed to $416 million from $541 million. Gross profit, the amount left after production and delivery costs, dropped to $119 million. The automotive unit reported a $62 million gross loss. SEC

Software and services posted a jump in gross profit to $181 million from $114 million. Rivian’s R2 comes with Autonomy+, a driver-assistance feature customers pay for. The company says these tools help the driver but don’t stand in for attention or control. SEC

The risk is clear. If R2 production is slow, or if buyers hold off for cheaper trims, or if higher rates and fuel costs hit budgets, Friday’s drop might stick around. Barclays analyst Dan Levy said most of these orders probably assumed the $7,500 EV credit, after U.S. policy changes raised prices for some buyers.

Rivian’s news flow may take a back seat this week as the focus shifts to Nvidia’s results and retailer earnings like Walmart, according to Reuters. The AI trade and “inflation-pressured consumer spending” are in focus. For Rivian, the question is whether demand holds up, if R2 reservations convert to real orders, and if Tesla’s latest price cut affects electric-SUV demand. Reuters

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors. Follow Khadija Saeed on Google News.

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