KEY POINTS
  • Wall Street's expectations for electric vehicle start-up Rivian Automotive are incredibly high following its blockbuster IPO last month.
  • Whether Rivian can live up to the hype will begin Thursday after the markets close when the automaker reports its first quarterly financial results as a public company.
  • While Rivian has given some earnings and production guidance as part of its IPO, investors will concentrate on any updates or changes to its plans.

In this article

A Rivian electric truck is displayed near the Nasdaq MarketSite building in Times Square on November 10, 2021 in New York City.

Wall Street analysts have set a high bar for EV start-up Rivian Automotive following its blockbuster IPO last month, comparing CEO RJ Scaringe to Superman and saying the company's "the one" capable of challenging Tesla.

Whether Rivian and Scaringe, who does resemble Clark Kent, can live up to the hype will begin Thursday after the markets close when the automaker reports its first quarterly financial results as a public company.

In this article