The Jerusalem Post

Self-driving start-ups race down a narrowing road

- • By PAUL LIENERT and JANE LANHEE LEE

DETROIT/SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Lei Xu and Justin Song once worked at electric carmaker Tesla Inc., one of the hottest companies in Silicon Valley. But with interest and investment­s in autonomous vehicles mounting, they left to pursue what they see as the next big thing.

Their company, Nullmax, is one of more than 240 startups worldwide, including 75 in Silicon Valley, attempting to design software, hardware components and systems for future self-driving cars, according to a Reuters analysis.

Xu and Song are bankrolled by corporate money. But unlike many of their fellow entreprene­urs, they skipped funding from Silicon Valley venture capitalist­s. Founded in August 2016, Nullmax got $10 million from a Chinese firm, Xinmao Science and Technology Co.

By seeking corporate backing in China, the Nullmax founders managed to sidestep an issue facing other start-ups in the sector: While big automotive and technology companies are pouring billions into the autonomous-vehicle space, Silicon Valley investors so far have been fairly restrained in increasing their bets.

Headlines have been dominated by old-line players such as General Motors Co., which jolted the industry last year when it bought a tiny San Francisco software company called Cruise Automation for a reported $1 billion. Just last week, top-tier supplier Delphi Automotive PLC acquired Boston-based software start-up nuTonomy for $450m.

Now, “every start-up thinks they will get a billion dollars” in valuation, said Evangelos Simoudis, a Silicon Valley venture investor and an adviser on corporate innovation.

However, investment in untested start-up companies remains relatively modest despite all the buzz and lofty expectatio­ns. Total funding of self-driving start-ups from both corporate and private investors has barely topped $5b., the Reuters analysis of publicly available data shows.

With the notable exceptions of Andreessen Horowitz and New Enterprise Associates, few of the big Silicon Valley venture-capital firms are heavily invested in the sector. Overall, only seven of the top 30 self-driving start-ups have received later-stage funding, the Reuters analysis shows, an indication that some venture capitalist­s are ambivalent about the industry’s potential.

Skeptics note that few of the start-ups are making money. And establishe­d auto and parts companies have not demonstrat­ed a clear path to revenue and profitabil­ity in autonomous vehicles despite their big bets in the space.

Another sticking point: While the initial wave of self-driving vehicles is expected to begin commercial service in 2019-20, experts expect the transition from human-driven to automated cars could take a decade or more to roll out.

Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s CEO Sergio Marchionne cautions: “You can destroy a lot of value by chasing your tail in autonomous driving.”

CORPORATE INVESTMENT­S

All told, US automotive and technology firms likely have invested some $40b. to $50b. in self-driving technology in recent years, mainly through acquisitio­ns and partnershi­ps. The full extent is hard to know because big players such as Alphabet Inc., whose Waymo subsidiary is considered among the front-runners in the arena, have not revealed the full scope of their investment­s, but it is believed to be in the billions.

Among the top corporate investors in the sector are Samsung Group, Intel Corp., Qualcomm Inc., Delphi and Robert Bosch GmbH.

Whether the industry is poised to produce more such unicorns is now a topic of much debate. Two former investors in Cruise Automation, for example, are poles apart in their views of self-driving vehicles and technology.

Veronica Wu, managing partner in Palo Alto-based Hone Capital, said her company continues to invest in “quite a number” of self-driving startups, while acknowledg­ing that the technology will take time to deploy.

“It’s a matter of when, not if,” she said. “We’re fairly optimistic.”

In contrast, Sunny Dhillon of Signia Venture Partners, another Cruise investor, said his firm does not see any attractive investment­s in the sector right now.

The hefty price paid by GM for Cruise, he said, “made the space very frothy, with every computer-vision and robotics PhD student seemingly emerging with a new self-driving car start-up.”

Quin Garcia, a partner in San Francisco-based AutoTech Ventures, concurs that the space is crowded and valuations are inflated. There may still be “a select few IPOs, but there will be many failures of autonomous-vehicle start-ups” by 2021, he said.

NULLMAX IN CHINA

Those odds have not deterred Nullmax founders Xu and Song, who are looking to differenti­ate themselves.

With many self-driving start-ups looking to supply US and European automakers, the Chinese-born entreprene­urs, whose specialtie­s are camera-based vision systems and artificial intelligen­ce, are focused on China. They expect to deliver the first partially automated systems to Chinese automakers by 2020.

The US-educated entreprene­urs, both 35, now work out of a small shop in Fremont, California, not far from Tesla’s sprawling home factory. Xu once worked at Tesla as a senior engineer, while Song specialize­d in supply chain and quality engineerin­g.

Xu said the company employs about 50 people, most of them in a larger office in Shanghai. He said the company wants to keep a foot in California, which is a hub of US tech talent and where regulators have smoothed the way for testing of self-driving vehicles.

 ?? (Jane Lanhee Lee/Reuters) ?? NULLMAX CEO Lei Xu drives a Lincoln MKZ sedan equipped with his company’s prototype self-driving hardware and software in Fremont, California, earlier this month.
(Jane Lanhee Lee/Reuters) NULLMAX CEO Lei Xu drives a Lincoln MKZ sedan equipped with his company’s prototype self-driving hardware and software in Fremont, California, earlier this month.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel