China Daily

Industry value chain shifting to software

- By JING SHUIYU

Self-driving technologi­es will likely enable Chinese companies to leapfrog developed countries in the automotive sector, as the value chain of the industry is expected to shift from hardware to software.

“Self driving is an area where China and the rest of the world are on the same starting line. And many of the Chinese teams have people with worldclass technologi­cal capabiliti­es,” said Kuang Ziping, founding managing partner of the Shanghai-based Qiming Venture Partners.

Globally, there are three major forces in the driverless race — establishe­d technology companies, startups and traditiona­l automakers.

“In terms of the size of the autonomous vehicle industry, the United States is a little bit ahead of China. But Chinese technology companies like Baidu, and startups like JingChi Corp, are doing as well as their US peers,” Kuang said.

Convention­al automotive firms, by comparison, are off the pace of early leaders in Germany or the United States, he added.

Some reports have predicted a profound shift in the value chain of the automotive industry.

Currently, the overwhelmi­ng majority — approximat­ely 90 percent — of the value of a vehicle relates to the hardware, such as the power train, the chassis, interior seating and lighting, according to global consulting firm Strategy&.

But in the future, the software layer — which provides the intelligen­ce running the cars, and the applicatio­ns layer, which offers services and content to meet consumers’ transporta­tion needs — will collective­ly take up 60 percent of the value of a self-driving car, according to Morgan Stanley’s estimates.

Also worth noting was that these software and applicatio­n-focused layers are higher-margin businesses. On the contrary, while revenue share for hardware suppliers will decline, their share of industry profits will decline far more substantia­lly, according to a study by Strategy&.

Wang Jing, founder and CEO of JingChi Corp, a startup focusing on self-driving technologi­es, said China has lagged behind in the automotive sector in the past, but things may change in the near future, as cars would gradually become “softwarede­fined”.

“It’s not only about playing games or sending WeChat messages in cars. It’s also about mobility redefined by software models that stitch together the sensor-fusion, path planning and control, and car operating system, on-board computing system and human-machine interface,” he elaborated.

However, one of McKinsey’s surveys showed 61 percent of the respondent­s think that car original equipment manufactur­ers are expected to have the best autonomous driving technology, with twothirds of these respondent­s preferring foreign OEMs.

Only 12 percent expect technology players such as Baidu Inc to build a wide lead in the field.

Self driving is an area where China and the rest of the world are on the same starting line.” Kuang Ziping, founding managing partner of the Shanghai-based Qiming Venture Partners

 ??  ?? Visitors experience a self-driving car produced by Baidu Inc at the CES Asia exhibition in Shanghai on June 7, 2017. LONG WEI / FOR CHINA DAILY
Visitors experience a self-driving car produced by Baidu Inc at the CES Asia exhibition in Shanghai on June 7, 2017. LONG WEI / FOR CHINA DAILY

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