Rivian Automotive, Inc. (RIVN) isn't just slapping a chatbot into its dashboard and calling it innovation. The electric vehicle maker has spent nearly two years building an AI assistant that actually controls vehicle functions, a project developed separately from its $5.8 billion technology joint venture with Volkswagen AG (VWAGY).
Think of it as the difference between asking Siri to play music and asking an AI to adjust your suspension settings mid-drive. Rivian designed this assistant to integrate fully with vehicle controls rather than functioning as a simple infotainment chatbot.
The Palo Alto team built a flexible, model-agnostic architecture and focused on software layers that coordinate workflows and manage control logic across systems, TechCrunch reported on Tuesday.
Rivian's software chief, Wassym Bensaid, told TechCrunch earlier this year that the company aims to launch by year-end and plans to share more during its AI & Autonomy Day livestream on December 11.
The assistant relies on a hybrid software stack combining edge AI, which handles tasks on the vehicle itself, and cloud AI for heavier computing demands. Rivian developed most of the stack in-house, including custom models and an orchestration layer that ensures all AI components work together seamlessly.
The Bigger Picture for EVs
While Rivian pushes deeper into AI territory, CEO RJ Scaringe is pointing out some uncomfortable truths about the U.S. electric vehicle market. Speaking at Fortune's Brainstorm AI event, Scaringe told Business Insider that compared to Europe and China, the U.S. offers a "shocking lack of choice" for EVs priced below $50,000.
He argued that limited supply, not weak demand, is restraining growth. His point? Tesla Inc. (TSLA) remains the only broadly accessible option in that price bracket. That's a narrow playing field for an entire industry supposedly racing toward an electric future.
Wall Street Gets Nervous
Rivian shares fell Monday after Morgan Stanley downgraded the EV maker from Equal Weight to Underweight, setting a new $12 price forecast. Analyst Andrew Percoco cited "outsized risk" heading into 2026, warning that the launch of Rivian's lower-priced R2 faces a tough EV market with slowing adoption, the loss of the $7,500 federal tax credit, and ongoing concerns about range and charging infrastructure.
Morgan Stanley also flagged potential financial pressure, projecting $4.2 billion in free cash flow burn next year and the risk that R2 sales could cannibalize demand for the R1 lineup. That's the classic automaker dilemma: do you launch a cheaper model that might steal sales from your premium vehicles, or do you wait and risk letting competitors grab market share?
Investors are now looking to Rivian's AI Day on December 11 for updates on autonomous driving capabilities and its capital partnership with Volkswagen. Despite the recent downgrade, Rivian shares have gained over 33% year-to-date.
RIVN Price Action: Rivian shares were down 0.17% at $17.68 during premarket trading on Wednesday, according to market data.