Shares of Rivian Automotive Inc., the money-losing EV startup, may get pushed out of the Nasdaq 100 Index as early as this month after plunging more than 90 percent from their record high, according to JP Morgan Securities.
The index typically removes the smallest members of the Nasdaq 100 if the company is weighted at less than 0.1 percent of the gauge for two consecutive months, JPMorgan analyst Min Moon writes in a note on Thursday. As Rivian was below 0.1 percent as of April 28 and May 31, Moon expects the carmaker to be excluded from the index on the third Friday of June.
ON Semiconductor is ranked at the top of the eligible companies to replace the EV maker, Moon added.
A removal from the index would deal another blow to a stock that’s been pummeled since soon after its November 2021 initial public offering.
After briefly riding the frenzy for all things related to EVs, Rivian’s shares started unraveling. Investors soured on risky growth names, correctly anticipating the Federal Reserve would raise rates to arrest inflation, in turn slowing the economy and making sales of an expensive electric pickup truck less likely.
Representatives of Rivian and Nasdaq declined to comment on Thursday.
Rivian shares fell as much as 4.8 percent to $14.02 on Thursday in New York, but later pared most of the losses to close at $14.58.