Shares in Rivian Automotive Inc. fell nearly 10 percent in premarket trading after a media report that Ford Motor Co. is selling 8 million of its shares in the EV producer at a discount.
Ford’s sale is being handled by Goldman Sachs Group Inc., CNBC’s David Faber said in a tweet.
The U.S. manufacturer owns about 12 percent of the EV startup, or just under 102 million shares after taking a stake prior to Rivian going public last year. An insider lockup period expired Sunday after the November share sale that saw the company’s market value briefly top $100 billion making the developer more valuable at the time than Ford and General Motors.
Rivian shares have since plunged after its pickup launch was slower than investors expected.
JPMorgan Chase & Co. is also selling a block of 13 million to 15 million shares in the manufacturer for an unknown seller, Faber reported, citing unidentified people. Both blocks are priced at $26.90 — a discount of 6.7 percent to Friday’s close.
Irvine, Calif.-based Rivian is a high-profile, well-funded newcomer to the growing pack of EV manufacturers. The IPO was the sixth biggest in U.S. history, generating more than $13 billion to fund growth. However, Rivian has struggled to ramp production of its products at an existing plant in Normal, Illinois, due to supply-chain pressures.