Business World

Toyota Motor Corp. and SoftBank Group Corp. to team up in self-driving and other technology

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TOKYO — Toyota Motor Corp. and SoftBank Group Corp. will announce a partnershi­p on automated driving and other technology on Thursday, sources with knowledge of the matter told Reuters.

The companies plan to hold a news conference later in the day. Toyota President Akio Toyoda and SoftBank Group CEO Masayoshi Son will attend a session to be held alongside the conference, they said in a joint statement, without providing additional details.

Japan’s highest-profile companies will announce that they will partner up to develop self-driving vehicles and other new mobility technologi­es, the sources said on condition of anonymity as the nature of the announceme­nt was confidenti­al.

They will form a joint venture, the sources said. Partnershi­ps in automated driving technologi­es are on the rise as establishe­d players fear being left behind in the rapidly changing industry.

On Wednesday, Honda Motor Co. Ltd. said it would invest $2.75 billion and take a 5.7% stake in General Motors Co.’s Cruise self-driving vehicle unit, in which SoftBank is also an investor.

At the Paris Auto Show on Wednesday, the heads of Daimler AG and Renault said the two companies may expand their cooperatio­n to batteries, self-driving vehicles and mobility services.

Toyota and SoftBank do not have any major partnershi­ps in mobility technologi­es at the moment, although both are developing technologi­es for self-driving vehicles, car sharing and other services.

Toyota, one of the world’s largest automakers, has been developing automated driving and artificial intelligen­ce technologi­es in-house and with its group suppliers, while acquiring some technology start-ups.

Both Toyota and SoftBank have investment­s and partnershi­ps with Uber Technologi­es and ride-hailing firm Grab, and Didi Chuxing.

The automaker envisions the future of transporta­tion services will include convoys of shuttle bus-sized, self-driving multipurpo­se vehicles used, for instance, as pay-per-use mobile restaurant­s and hotels.

SoftBank has its own autonomous vehicle unit, SB Drive, which has been developing self-driving technology for buses. —

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