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						Toyota to invest $500 million in Uber for self-driving 
						cars
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		 [August 28, 2018] 
		 By Heather Somerville 
 (Reuters) - Toyota Motor Corp <7203.T> will 
		invest $500 million in Uber Technologies Inc to jointly work on 
		developing self-driving cars, the companies said on Monday, a bid by 
		both to catch up to rivals in the hotly competitive autonomous driving 
		business.
 
 Toyota, one of the world's largest carmakers, and Uber [UBER.UL], the 
		leading ride-hailing service, are widely seen as lagging the competition 
		in developing self-driving cars.
 
 Their deal deepens an existing relationship and reflects CEO Dara 
		Khosrowshahi's strategy of Uber developing autonomous vehicles through 
		partnerships, rather than on its own.
 
 The deal also breathes new life into Uber's self-driving business. Since 
		a self-driving Uber SUV killed a pedestrian in Tempe, Arizona, in March, 
		Uber has removed its robot cars from the road, laid off hundreds of test 
		drivers and shuttered operations in Arizona, its autonomous testing hub.
 
		
		 
		The investment values Uber at $72 billion, matching the valuation Uber 
		received in a deal with Alphabet Inc <GOOGL.O> self-driving unit Waymo 
		this year.
 Uber will combine its autonomous driving system with Toyota's Guardian 
		technology, which offers automated safety features such as lane-keeping 
		but does not enable a vehicle to drive completely autonomously.
 
 The combined technology will be built into Toyota's Sienna minivans, to 
		be deployed on Uber's ride-hailing network starting in 2021, Uber said.
 
 The companies' aim is to solve the enormously challenging problem of how 
		to mass produce self-driving cars for shared fleets, including 
		ride-hailing services.
 
 Jeff Miller, Uber's head of business development for strategic 
		initiatives, said the partnership "really paints the picture of how we 
		envision deploying autonomous technology in the long term." That 
		includes licensing its autonomous technology to carmakers and enlisting 
		a third party to own and maintain the fleet.
 
 The third party that will operate the Toyota autonomous fleet has not 
		yet been chosen, Miller said.
 
		 
		For the Japanese automaker, the "agreement and investment marks an 
		important milestone in our transformation to a mobility company as we 
		help provide a path for safe and secure expansion of mobility services 
		like ride-sharing that includes Toyota vehicles and technologies," its 
		executive vice president Shigeki Tomoyama said in a statement.
 
		
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			The logo of Uber is pictured during the presentation of their new 
			security measures in Mexico City, Mexico April 10, 2018. REUTERS/Ginnette 
			Riquelme/File Photo 
            
			 
SELF-DRIVING PLANS
 Toyota has been less aggressive than some rivals on moving toward full-fledged 
autonomous driving, expressing caution about the technology and focusing on 
partial autonomous systems like Guardian. But it has invested in research and 
plans to begin testing self-driving electric cars around 2020.
 
 A Toyota official said the company would continue its research into self-driving 
technology, and that it would not combine its research efforts with Uber.
 
Uber has admitted its technology lags Waymo, and the crash in Arizona was a 
further setback in development and testing. The Toyota partnership puts pressure 
on Uber to resume testing on public roads, but the company has run up against 
regulators and politicians with safety concerns. Miller said Uber plans to have 
autonomous cars back on public streets by the end of the year.
 Khosrowshahi, who took over Uber a year ago, has recently explored options that 
include more partnerships as well as a potential sale of the self-driving 
business, separate sources have told Reuters. The self-driving unit is a 
significant contributor to Uber's losses, which in the second quarter were $891 
million.
 
 
Uber has a deal to buy cars from Volvo, outfit them with Uber's technology and 
maintain them, a more labor-intensive project than the Toyota plans.
 The company also has a partnership with Daimler AG <DAIGn.DE>, in which the 
carmaker proposes to put its own self-driving cars in Uber's ride-hailing 
network.
 
 Khosrowshahi's partnership strategy is a shift. Uber co-founder and former CEO 
Travis Kalanick had insisted on developing a proprietary self-driving system and 
called autonomous cars "existential" to Uber.
 
 Previously, Uber and Toyota partnered on an electric mobility project. Two years 
ago, Toyota invested an undisclosed sum in Uber and the two companies partnered 
on a car-leasing program for Uber drivers. Uber has since shuttered its U.S. 
leasing business.
 
 (Reporting by Heather Somerville in San Francisco; Additional reporting by Nori 
Shirouzu in Beijing, Arunima Banerjee in Bengaluru; Editing by David Gregorio, 
Dan Grebler and Lisa Shumaker)
 
 
				 
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