There is a
clutch of self-driving cars and cars with autonomous driving features on the
market today. Drivers just cannot seem
to get enough of them. Apparently, the
idea of zooming down the highway with little to no responsibility holds
considerable appeal. Then again, maybe
it is the novelty of the idea that will eventually give way to the next
fad.
In August 2018,
Cox Automotive revealed the results of a survey that found fewer Americans are
embracing self-driving technology than previously thought. A surprising 49% of respondents said they
would NEVER own a fully-autonomous car.
This is up from 30% naysayers two years ago. Views on the safety potential in self-driving
cars have shifted as well. The Cox
survey found that 45% of the respondents in the recent survey believe the roads
will be safer with self-driving cars.
The confidence level was 63% two years ago.
Why have
automotive manufacturers put so much time, effort and capital into a technology
that is losing favor with consumers at such a fast pace? According to the Brookings Institute by the
end of third quarter 2017, over $80 billion had been invested in technology to
deliver cars with various levels of driving autonomy. CB Insights reports another $4.2 billion was
invested in the first nine months of 2018.
Automotive
manufacturers are certainly not responding to a clamor for autonomous driving
from consumers. Interest in self-driving
cars really came first from the U.S. military where automatic vehicle
deployment could help keep soldiers safer.
Over half of casualties in combat zones involve military personnel
making critical deliveries of fuel, food and supplies. Car makers grabbed onto the idea because
production of self-driving cars could help them overcome the short comings of
highly cyclical sales pattern associated with its present production lines.
Unlike the cars
we know today that are the equipment of an individual driver, autonomous
driving cars could be operated collectively.
Certainly individuals could still own or lease a car, but likely the
technology could give rise to various service models for transportation and
delivery. Consequently, the buying
decision could shed its cyclic nature, giving automotive manufacturers hope for
consistent revenue throughout the year.
Automotive
manufacturers are certainly willing to dictate to consumers what they want, not
because the product is a good for consumers but because the product has great
advantage for the producer - consistent quarterly earnings that drive
stock prices! All of a sudden the $80
billion investment seems like a bargain.
History has
recorded ambitious manufacturers as winners and we expect a repeat. Autonomous driving cars could be a compelling
investment opportunity. The early
entrants to the competition have been the most popular so far: Tesla (TSLA:
Nasdaq), Alphabet (GOOG: Nasdaq),
Audi AG (NSU: DE), and Toyota (TM: NYSE) to name just four. In the
next post we explore a few less obvious options.
Neither the author of the Small Cap Strategist web
log, Crystal Equity Research nor its affiliates have a beneficial interest in
the companies mentioned herein.
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