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Toyota Invests $500 Million in Uber to Get Self-Driving Cars on the Road

Toyota Motor Corp. is expanding an alliance with Uber Technologies Inc.

Toyota Invests $500 Million in Uber to Get Self-Driving Cars on the Road
Toyota Motor Corp. workers install the engine in a Mirai fuel-cell vehicle (FCV). (Photographer: Tomohiro Ohsumi/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Toyota Motor Corp. is investing $500 million more in Uber Technologies Inc., underscoring the Japanese automaker’s efforts to catch up on self-driving technology as General Motors Co. and Alphabet Inc.’s Waymo lead the race to upend the industry.

As part of the accord announced Monday, Toyota plans to manufacture Sienna minivans loaded with Uber’s software, with testing slated to begin on Uber’s ride-sharing network in 2021. Toyota’s stake is set to value the ride-hailing company at $72 billion, according to a person familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified because the details are private.

The 81-year-old manufacturer is accelerating a push to transform into a mobility-services provider, with Chief Executive Officer Akio Toyoda warning that a once-a-century paradigm shift in the industry has become a life-or-death battle for traditional automakers. Uber isn’t Toyota’s only investment in a ride-sharing company -- it poured $1 billion into Southeast Asia’s Grab earlier this year and has a partnership with China’s Didi Chuxing Inc. Toyota is also a backer of Japan Taxi, an Uber rival run by the chairman of Tokyo’s biggest taxi operator.

Carmakers and technology companies alike are working toward a future where autonomous robo-taxis will lessen the need for individual car ownership. The Toyota City-based company, which initially bought a small stake in Uber in 2016, is spreading its bets far and wide for a shot at these nascent technologies. Toyoda has said there are “no nautical charts for us to follow” in plotting the course to future mobility.

Toyota Invests $500 Million in Uber to Get Self-Driving Cars on the Road

Uber and Didi are also partnering with Toyota in the carmaker’s vision for a fleet of autonomous, modular boxes on wheels that can be customized to transport anything from people to pizza. CEO Toyoda unveiled the concept, dubbed e-Palette, at CES in Las Vegas in January. Amazon.com Inc. and Pizza Hut also signed on.

Toyota’s expanded foray aligns it with Japanese internet giant SoftBank Group Corp., which is already among the biggest backers of the main ride-hailing companies: Uber, Didi and Grab. SoftBank founder Masayoshi Son has sunk as much as $9.5 billion into Didi, led investments worth $9.3 billion in Uber and $4 billion in Grab, and owns a stake in India’s Ola. SoftBank’s Vision Fund is also an investor in GM’s Cruise autonomous-car unit and Manbang Group, China’s Uber-like truck-rental company.

Technology companies need automakers to bring their disruptive ideas to fruition. Automakers bring the knowledge of how to build a car and the factories to do it. What they lack is the legions of software engineers that technology companies possess.

Need Partners

“Since 2015, we’ve been working to bring safe, reliable self-driving technology to the Uber network,” Eric Meyhofer, head of Uber’s Advanced Technologies Group, wrote in a blog post Monday afternoon. “We knew we couldn’t do it alone, which is why we continue to partner with world-class vehicle manufacturers to make our vision a reality.”

Uber and Toyota expect that the mass-produced autonomous vehicles will be owned and operated by a third-party company they mutually agree on, according to the carmaker.

The deal with Toyota raises Uber’s valuation and matches the value of shares given to Waymo after Uber settled a lawsuit over self-driving cars. A group of investors had valued Uber at $62 billion earlier this year.

Giving Incentives

Toyota’s relationship with Uber stretches back to at least 2013, when Uber drivers started to get discounted financing on Toyota cars. As with traditional rental companies like Avis Budget Group Inc., Toyota is trying to sell Uber fleet-management services based on the rapidly expanding volume of data it’s collecting from connected cars. These services include being able to monitor whether a car is being properly maintained or driven too aggressively.

“Nobody knows what kind of business opportunities the sharing economy will create, so for now Toyota feels like it needs to just get that know-how,” said Koji Endo, an auto analyst at SBI Securities Co. in Tokyo. “They don’t know what kind of return the company can expect on its $1 billion investment in Grab. It’s like they’re groping in the dark.”

Toyota has stuck with Uber even after one of the ride-hailing company’s autonomous Volvos hit and killed a woman in Tempe, Arizona in March, in what was likely the first pedestrian death linked to a self-driving vehicle. Public road testing of the cars is still on hold following the incident, in which Uber had deactivated Volvo’s automatic braking system.

Safety Net

In the current venture, Toyota’s own autonomous driving system, which uses banks of sensors to anticipate what other vehicles and pedestrians are doing in a wide space around the vehicle, will function as a safety net alongside Uber’s self-driving software.

In a separate partnership around self-driving vehicle development announced in January, a Toyota spokesman had also said Uber wouldn’t turn off the automaker’s built-in safety features.

Uber has developed a three-pronged self-driving strategy. For one, Uber purchased Volvos, retrofitted the cars with its self-driving technology and operates the fleet on its own. In another, Daimler AG will own and operate its own self-driving cars on Uber’s network. And the deal with Toyota becomes a third pillar, where Uber licenses its technology.

CEO Dara Khosrowshahi is looking to stabilize Uber following March’s fatal crash and a year of corporate scandals that saw the share price swing more widely than a typical privately held company. He has made it a priority to fix a corporate culture tainted by allegations of sexual harassment and questionable business practices, and just days ago named a new chief financial officer following a three-year search ahead of a prospective public offering next year.

--With assistance from John Lippert, Nao Sano and Hannah Dormido.

To contact the reporters on this story: Eric Newcomer in San Francisco at enewcomer@bloomberg.net;Kevin Buckland in Tokyo at kbuckland1@bloomberg.net;Pavel Alpeyev in Tokyo at palpeyev@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Sam Nagarajan at samnagarajan@bloomberg.net, ;Mark Milian at mmilian@bloomberg.net, ;Robert Fenner at rfenner@bloomberg.net, Kenneth Wong

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.