2kwik4u
Jetboaters Fleet Admiral
- Messages
- 7,722
- Reaction score
- 10,231
- Points
- 577
- Location
- Buffalo, NY
- Boat Make
- Yamaha
- Year
- 2017
- Boat Model
- AR
- Boat Length
- 19
I'll be honest, I didn't read all that. I'd point out that a full size truck is much bigger inside than a Rivian. You're also comparing a lifted off road truck to one that is designed with efficiency in mind somewhat. If you lift and put big mud tires on the Rivian, efficiency goes down. Also, holy crap you drove a lot of miles, lol.
That said, I was speaking more about the automakers money being thrown in a hole, not consumers. Certainly they're more cost effective for some people. And while there a lot of pre-orders, 500 to 1000 bucks to maybe be able to flip one and/or hope you can pay for it in a few years is very different from actually selling a vehicle. Think of how many people are out there with multiple reservations for multiple vehicles, etc. I don't put a ton of faith in those kinds of reservations.
My thought was more that the automakers are spending a Ton of money, and it does appear likely that a lot of the reservations for these EVs are coming from the same sources. I've heard of independent dealers resvering a ton of them to resell, people reserving tons to sell their spots, etc. I'd hope the automakers would have thought this through, but you know, I also recognize that sometimes big corporations make choices based on making their stock look valuable to a financial industry that's out of touch vs what actual consumers will buy. For reference, look at automaker financial performance when their customer loyalty and satisfaction is at an all time low.
You make some valid points.
I do drive a lot. I'm not a fan, but it's where I'm at. Bought the Q7 a year ago with 40k miles on it. Has 60.5k on it now
The conversion from reservation to sale in this market doesn't have a lot of known data outside of Tesla. Arguably Tesla is a data/tech company masquerading as a car company, so not sure how much we can count those. Other popular cars have a pretty good conversion percentage though. Think high end or rare vehicles. Wait lists for those have been common for years, and are likewise enthusiast driven. I would consider EV's to be enthusiast driven at this point as well as they aren't quite mainstream yet.
Stock prices to cater to wall street isn't quite accurate either. Especially in big markets like automotive. They cater to shareholders, and shareholders look at valuations, market capitalization, and E/R ratios. Those are driven less by wall street and more by business. Sure, there are tons of prospectors out there driving the hype, but the CEO's answer to the board before they answer to prospectors. Company makes a big bet and loses, heads role. I promise there aren't enough golden parachutes to make CEO's purposefully bomb a company at that level.