REV Group, Inc., together with its subsidiaries, designs, manufactures, and distributes specialty vehicles, and related aftermarket parts and services in North America and internationally. It operates through two Specialty Vehicles and Recreational Vehicles segments. The Specialty Vehicles segment provides fire apparatus equipment under the Emergency One, Kovatch Mobile Equipment, Ferrara, Spartan Emergency Response, Smeal, Spartan Fire Chassis, and Ladder Tower brand names; ambulances under the American Emergency Vehicles, Horton Emergency Vehicles, Leader Emergency Vehicles, Road Rescue, and Wheeled Coach brand names; and terminal trucks and sweepers under the Capacity and Laymor brand names. The Recreation segment offers motorized and towable RV models under the American Coach, Fleetwood RV, Holiday Rambler, Renegade RV, Midwest Automotive Designs, and Lance Camper brand names; and produces a range of custom molded fiberglass products. It offers products, such as pumper / tanker, aerial and tanker trucks, aircraft rescue firefighting, custom cabs & chassis, terminal trucks, sweepers, travel trailers and truck campers, and other vehicles. The company sells its products to municipalities, government agencies, private contractors, consumers, and industrial and commercial end users through its direct sales force or dealer network. The company was formerly known as Allied Specialty Vehicles, Inc. and changed its name to REV Group, Inc. in November 2015. REV Group, Inc. was incorporated in 2008 and is based in Brookfield, Wisconsin.
U.S. Market Performance
7D7 Days: -1.2%
3M3 Months: 12.3%
1Y1 Year: 21.3%
YTDYear to Date: 7.0%
Over the past 7 days, the market has dropped 1.2% with the Consumer Discretionary sector contributing the most to the decline. In contrast to the last week, the market is actually up 21% over the past year. As for the next few years, earnings are expected to grow by 15% per annum. Market details ›
This week, we’re diving deeper into the world of agentic AI. We’re zeroing in on the core technologies that make these intelligent agents actually reliably work. We explore what all this could mean for software, start-ups, and most importantly, the opportunities and risks each industry faces by adopting Agentic AI.