Rivian (RIVN) Stock: Why One Analyst Just Doubled His Price Target
An analyst just slapped a doubled price target on Rivian—and the market's paying attention.
Wall Street's latest love letter to the EV maker comes with a bold prediction. One voice in the research chorus just cranked up the volume, taking his RIVN target to a level that makes the old one look conservative.
The Bull Case Gets a Turbocharge
This isn't just a minor adjustment. Doubling down signals a deep conviction in the company's trajectory—production ramps, demand signals, and that ever-elusive path to profitability are suddenly looking clearer through one bullish lens.
The move cuts through the sector's noise, bypassing short-term delivery hiccups and focusing on the long-game narrative Rivian's betting on.
Reading Between the Lines
Analyst upgrades are a dime a dozen, but a target this aggressive? It's a statement. It bets on execution, scale, and the brand's sticky appeal in a crowded field—a calculated gamble that the story is stronger than the quarterly numbers suggest.
It fuels the momentum trade, giving investors a fresh data point to justify the faith. Or, as the cynics in finance might mutter, it's another expertly timed narrative to keep the capital flowing while the real work gets done.
One thing's clear: in the high-stakes EV game, Rivian just got a louder cheerleader. Whether the stock follows the script is the next chapter.
TLDR
- Baird analyst Ben Kallo upgraded Rivian stock to Buy from Hold, raising the price target from $14 to $25
- The R2 platform launching mid-2026 is expected to move Rivian from the $70,000+ luxury market into the mass market at $45,000
- Wall Street reduced 2026 sales estimates from 97,000 to 66,000 vehicles after the federal EV tax credit was removed
- Only 30% of analysts rate Rivian as Buy, compared to 55% for S&P 500 stocks
- Rivian trades at 4x sales with a $22 billion market cap versus Tesla’s 17x sales at $1.6 trillion
Rivian got a vote of confidence from Wall Street on Thursday. Baird analyst Ben Kallo upgraded the stock to Buy and more than doubled his price target.
Rivian Automotive, Inc., RIVN
The new price target sits at $25, up from $14. That’s a healthy jump for a stock that’s been caught in the crossfire of cooling EV demand.
Kallo’s thesis centers on one thing: the R2 platform. “2026 is the year of R2,” he wrote in his research note.
The R2 vehicles will start hitting the market in mid-2026. This matters because it represents a fundamental shift for Rivian’s business model.
Right now, Rivian sells the R1T pickup and R1S SUV. Both carry premium price tags north of $70,000. That’s fine for building a brand, but it’s a narrow lane.
The R2 SUV changes the equation. At $45,000, it drops Rivian into the heart of the mass market. Think Toyota RAV4 territory, not Range Rover.
Kallo sees the R2 as “a boost for Rivian’s brand, product demand, and thus by extension the stock.” He’s not alone in that view, though Wall Street remains split on the name.
Only 30% of analysts covering Rivian rate it a Buy. That’s well below the 55% average for S&P 500 stocks. The average price target sits around $16.
Rivian shares jumped 3.6% to $18.27 in premarket trading Thursday. The stock has climbed 33% so far this year.
The EV Tax Credit Problem
The upgrade comes at a tricky moment for electric vehicle makers. Sales dropped in October and November after the $7,500 federal tax credit disappeared in September.
That credit removal hit forward estimates hard. Wall Street now expects Rivian to deliver about 66,000 vehicles in 2026. A year ago, that number was 97,000.
Rivian is on track to deliver roughly 43,000 cars in 2025. So the 2026 estimate still represents growth, just not the explosive kind originally anticipated.
The tax credit headwind affects everyone in the EV space. But Kallo thinks Rivian’s new product cycle can power through it.
Beyond Just Cars
Kallo also highlighted Rivian’s autonomous driving work. The company is designing custom microchips for self-driving tech.
That puts Rivian in the same conversation as the bigger players investing heavily in autonomy. The technology could provide a long-term competitive edge.
Rivian recently launched Autonomy+ software for a $2,500 one-time fee or $50 monthly. That kind of high-margin, recurring revenue is exactly what investors reward.
The company also secured a $5.8 billion deal with Volkswagen. That agreement validates Rivian’s electrical architecture as best-in-class technology.
If Rivian lands another major licensing deal, it could position itself as a platform provider, not just a vehicle manufacturer. Think less like a car company and more like a tech company.
At 4x sales with a $22 billion market cap, Rivian trades at a fraction of Tesla’s 17x sales multiple. Tesla carries a $1.6 trillion valuation that assumes years of flawless execution on robotaxis and humanoid robots.
Rivian’s valuation leaves room for upside if the R2 launch goes according to plan. Kallo wants to “own shares into the new product cycle.”
The R2 platform launches in the first half of 2026. Analysts project revenue growth of 28% or more that year if production ramps as planned.