National Post (National Edition)

Rental firms get share of self-driving car market

- DAVID WELCH AND ALEX WEBB Bloomberg News

SAN FRANCISCO • Old-school rental-car agencies may have a road map to prosper in the age of self-driving taxis.

Avis Budget Group agreed to manage a fleet of 600 self-driving Chrysler minivans for Alphabet’s Waymo autonomous technology division. In addition, Hertz Global Holdings will lease Lexus sport utility vehicles to Apple Inc., which will convert them to self-driving cars, said people familiar with the matter.

Those deals, while small in scope, comforted investors enough to push up shares of both companies by 14 per cent Monday.

The reason for the optimism: Calling on the likes of Avis and Hertz shows that Apple and Waymo are willing to partner with traditiona­l players instead of driving them into oblivion. The big technology companies may want into the self-driving vehicle business, but they don’t necessaril­y want to build, own or shine cars.

“Some people thought that they would be victims, but they’re the only companies that can handle fleets on a large scale,” Michael Millman, founder of Millman Research, said of the rental agencies. “Autonomous cars and ride-sharing are not the end of the rental business, but could end up being a benefit. It could be a source of profit for them.”

A new revenue stream would be a lifeline for the rental industry, whose shares have trailed the Standard & Poor’s 500 Stock Index over the past five years. Investors had soured as the companies lost customers to ride-sharing firms such as Uber Technologi­es Inc. and Lyft Inc., and as profit sagged with the declining value of cars sold at the end of their fleet service. Hertz alone had a $491-million loss last year (all figures US).

Now a new vision is taking shape: Establishe­d carmakers will build the vehicles. Technology developed by companies like Waymo and Apple will allow services like Uber and Lyft to operate self-driving taxis that pick up riders.

With the rental-agency relationsh­ips disclosed Monday, there may be greater clarity about who will actually own or maintain those fleets — everything from shoulderin­g depreciati­on costs to cleaning car seats to keeping them fuelled or charged. Right now, Uber and Lyft drivers maintain their own cars.

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