Sponsored

The looming recession & your place in line for a Rivian [WARNING: NO POLITICS]

yizzung

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jul 30, 2020
Threads
54
Messages
831
Reaction score
1,510
Location
California / Colorado
Vehicles
R1T | Audi allroad
Occupation
Tech
Caveats: I work in tech / private equity and have a July 2020 order for an R1T.

While I've been somewhat confident that we might pull off a soft landing, my economic outlook has darkened over the last few months. Pick your poison: war in Europe, Russian oil/gas embargo, China lockdown, 40-year high in inflation, supply chain problems (scarcity AND glut), rising interest rates, stock market sell-off, crypto bubble, housing bubble, pandemic, monkey pox, need I go on?

The inflation numbers out today indicate that the Fed has to get way more serious, which means recession is on the way. I'm seeing lots of companies freeze hiring and a trickle of early layoffs. But out in Silicon Valley, down-rounds, bigger layoffs, and liquidations of the more speculative startups are just around the corner.

To date, we've only heard about a steady uptick in Rivian orders. 90,000 (I think) in the last earnings call. But I'm increasingly convinced that a significant number of these orders are going to vaporize. Somebody placing their order 18 months ago when their stock portfolio was 30% higher than today or when they had access to a dirt cheap home equity loan or (worse) when they were gainfully employed, is in a different position today (or very likely will be in a different position six months from now). Not to mention that many folks seem to be hedging by putting multiple deposits on multiple cars.

I suspect that the recession is going to be uglier than most are anticipating. And when perception catches up to reality, I think a lot of people are going to be dialing back their purchases of boats and ski cabins and electric adventure toys. The good news? Well, I suspect that you might get your Rivian sooner than you expect, assuming you decide keep your place in line... :)
Sponsored

 

Count Orlok

Well-Known Member
Joined
May 17, 2022
Threads
185
Messages
2,564
Reaction score
5,348
Location
Wisconsin & New Mexico
Vehicles
2022 R1S/ 2024 INEOS Grenadier/ 1969 Ford / etc.
Occupation
retired
Clubs
 
Economists have predicted 11 of the 3 most recent recessions.
 

Count Orlok

Well-Known Member
Joined
May 17, 2022
Threads
185
Messages
2,564
Reaction score
5,348
Location
Wisconsin & New Mexico
Vehicles
2022 R1S/ 2024 INEOS Grenadier/ 1969 Ford / etc.
Occupation
retired
Clubs
 
rising interest rates are great for savers. Mortgage rates are still at historic lows.

inflation is good for people with fixed rate debt (I fear deflation more than inflation).

soft landing is in the eye of the beholder. If 99% of ones net worth (NW) is tied up in beanie babies and/or bitcoin it may be harder than those with diversity as well as ample liquid NW (LNW).
 

LaunchGreen

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 10, 2021
Threads
7
Messages
543
Reaction score
1,128
Location
California
Vehicles
Range Rover
Ya, I’m with you. In addition to declining asset prices, rising rates will make financing on a Rivian more expensive.

However, with 10% inflation, the price of Rivian is more of a deal than ever, however I suspect we will see the overheated car market calm down as well which might change the comparisons.
 

Sponsored

mini2nut

Well-Known Member
Joined
Feb 4, 2022
Threads
47
Messages
1,679
Reaction score
2,003
Location
SoCal
Vehicles
Rivian R1T, Model Y
I agree with your prediction. I think we will see a recession starting in Q4 of this year.
 

LaunchGreen

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 10, 2021
Threads
7
Messages
543
Reaction score
1,128
Location
California
Vehicles
Range Rover
rising interest rates are great for savers. Mortgage rates are still at historic lows.

inflation is good for people with fixed rate debt (I fear deflation more than inflation).

soft landing is in the eye of the beholder. If 99% of ones net worth (NW) is tied up in beanie babies and/or bitcoin it may be harder than those with diversity as well as ample liquid NW (LNW).

Savers, like in-a-bank savers? Is that a thing?
 

Engi_Nerd

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jul 21, 2021
Threads
6
Messages
248
Reaction score
487
Location
Western NY
Vehicles
Model Y LR, Alfa Romeo Giulia
I agree. The truck is already at the very top of what I'm comfortable spending and climbing interest rates look like they may soon price me out of play. Will also obviously make Rivian's survival that much trickier.
 

Count Orlok

Well-Known Member
Joined
May 17, 2022
Threads
185
Messages
2,564
Reaction score
5,348
Location
Wisconsin & New Mexico
Vehicles
2022 R1S/ 2024 INEOS Grenadier/ 1969 Ford / etc.
Occupation
retired
Clubs
 
Savers, like in-a-bank savers? Is that a thing?
sure. plenty of people sitting on cash. We're at about 30% cash, 20% real estate, 50% in a 70/30 investment portfolio, and 50% scotch (we're in our 50s so of course age matters).
 

NY_Rob

Well-Known Member
First Name
Rob
Joined
Feb 9, 2022
Threads
23
Messages
5,440
Reaction score
8,027
Location
long island
Vehicles
Model 3 LR AWD, BMW i3 REX, 2024 Rubicon 4xe
Occupation
IT
Both Elon and Jamie Dimon (fellow billionaire and Chairman of the Board/CEO JP Morgan Chase) have both recently been quoted as having very dire outlooks for the near term (8mo+) US and global economy.

Do we simply ignore the opinions of these two sage investors?


Two good things about the extended Rivian delays is later delivery customers get less buggy vehicles and we also get more time to squirrel away $$ for our down payment. If my delivery actually takes place as "promised" in Q4 this year, I should only need to finance less than $20k which is pretty easy to pay off monthly.
 
Last edited:

Sponsored

OP
OP
yizzung

yizzung

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jul 30, 2020
Threads
54
Messages
831
Reaction score
1,510
Location
California / Colorado
Vehicles
R1T | Audi allroad
Occupation
Tech
soft landing is in the eye of the beholder. If 99% of ones net worth (NW) is tied up in beanie babies and/or bitcoin it may be harder than those with diversity as well as ample liquid NW (LNW).
Sure. The Great Depression may have been viewed a soft landing by the 75% of the population who didn't become destitute but that's probably not the conventional way to perceive soft landings... :)

My point is that some portion of the people who sit somewhere along the bell curve of Rivian's 90K orders are going to be impacted. I think the ratio is higher than most think. Certainly higher than I thought just months ago.

The "store" that they just rolled out is probably a way to clear their inventory at more scale than they thought they might have to do originally.
 

LaunchGreen

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 10, 2021
Threads
7
Messages
543
Reaction score
1,128
Location
California
Vehicles
Range Rover
sure. plenty of people sitting on cash. We're at about 30% cash, 20% real estate, 50% in a 70/30 investment portfolio, and 50% scotch (we're in our 50s so of course age matters).
Ok, ya, I’m not dissimilar, but rising rates hurts 70% of that allocation and inflation eats at it all. For the cash, a 1% interest rate into 9% inflation isn’t really helpful.

Your only safe bet is the scotch. 100% ROI on that one.
 

moosehead

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 16, 2021
Threads
64
Messages
2,092
Reaction score
4,594
Location
Denver, CO
Vehicles
‘22 Ioniq 5, ‘78 Jeep Wagoneer
Agree with @ yizzung.

Typically one of three things proceed a recession: tightening Fed, inflation, inverted yield curve. We have all three. Add global conflict, and a hangover from 15 years of wildly accommodative monetary policy which inflated all valuations across the globe.
 

SANZC02

Well-Known Member
First Name
Bob
Joined
Feb 11, 2021
Threads
50
Messages
7,445
Reaction score
12,750
Location
California
Vehicles
Tesla Model S, LE - R1S
Occupation
Retired
I agree. The truck is already at the very top of what I'm comfortable spending and climbing interest rates look like they may soon price me out of play. Will also obviously make Rivian's survival that much trickier.
I think there are many reservation holders where you are.

Based on the responses from the March 1st price hike, many people said they were stretching at current prices and would be priced out with the higher prices.

Unless people have the funds set aside for a cash purchase, the rising prices that eat into available monthly free cash combined with higher interest rates will price people out as well.

I think the longer Rivian takes to convert pre-orders to sales, the lower the conversion rate will be on those pre-orders.
 

R1Sky Business

Well-Known Member
Joined
Mar 15, 2022
Threads
55
Messages
5,356
Reaction score
4,385
Location
CA
Vehicles
R1S
Clubs
 
Caveats: I work in tech / private equity and have a July 2020 order for an R1T.

While I've been somewhat confident that we might pull off a soft landing, my economic outlook has darkened over the last few months. Pick your poison: war in Europe, Russian oil/gas embargo, China lockdown, 40-year high in inflation, supply chain problems (scarcity AND glut), rising interest rates, stock market sell-off, crypto bubble, housing bubble, pandemic, monkey pox, need I go on?

The inflation numbers out today indicate that the Fed has to get way more serious, which means recession is on the way. I'm seeing lots of companies freeze hiring and a trickle of early layoffs. But out in Silicon Valley, down-rounds, bigger layoffs, and liquidations of the more speculative startups are just around the corner.

To date, we've only heard about a steady uptick in Rivian orders. 90,000 (I think) in the last earnings call. But I'm increasingly convinced that a significant number of these orders are going to vaporize. Somebody placing their order 18 months ago when their stock portfolio was 30% higher than today or when they had access to a dirt cheap home equity loan or (worse) when they were gainfully employed, is in a different position today (or very likely will be in a different position six months from now). Not to mention that many folks seem to be hedging by putting multiple deposits on multiple cars.

I suspect that the recession is going to be uglier than most are anticipating. And when perception catches up to reality, I think a lot of people are going to be dialing back their purchases of boats and ski cabins and electric adventure toys. The good news? Well, I suspect that you might get your Rivian sooner than you expect, assuming you decide keep your place in line... :)
Nothing but good news....happy Friday
Sponsored

 
 








Top