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December 23, 2024
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GM is in park with its driverless Cruise taxis. Should it stay there?


General Motors (GM) continues to see a future in its troubled Cruise robotaxi fleet — but in what form remains unclear.

“We’re still very committed, and we still see that as a big growth opportunity for us,” GM CFO Paul Jacobson said on Yahoo Finance Live (video above).

The support for the beleaguered Cruise — GM’s self-driving division — came after GM told investors on its fourth quarter earnings release a week ago that it’s aiming to slash expenses related to the brand by a whopping $1 billion this year.

This level of expense slashing at Cruise would suggest the potential for the robotaxi fleet to go away entirely and have its tech advancements folded into GM’s cars and trucks or licensed out to other transportation parties.

Jacobson added that a more complete view of Cruise’s operating structure will arrive later this year for investors.

“We’re still focused on the tech,” Jacobson said. “We’re still investing heavily in our engineering staff, and we’re committed to [doing] that. We’re going to reassess that strategy and think about what’s the right way to roll it out and how … we think about capital structure in the weeks and months ahead. There’s more information to come later this year as we think about what the right approach to bring Cruise to the market is.”

For now, Cruise remains in park after a rough 2023 of headlines and financial performance.

On Oct. 2, a Cruise vehicle ran over a woman in San Francisco. The woman was struck by a human-driven car and thrown in front of the self-driving Cruise vehicle, the LA Times reported. The Cruise robotaxi didn’t process the incident correctly, which caused the woman severe injuries, as the car reportedly dragged her 20 feet.

California’s Department of Motor Vehicles suspended Cruise’s license to operate in the state. The agency determined that Cruise’s vehicles are not safe for public operation. Cruise also misrepresented safety information about the driverless technology, the department said.

Cruise paused all its driverless operations.

The incident led to the departure of Cruise CEO Kyle Vogt, who boasted in 2022 that the brand would hit $1 billion in sales by 2025. It also led to a series of ongoing investigations and inquiries by various government agencies, according to Yahoo Finance’s review of GM’s new annual report.

“In addition, certain federal and state agencies, including the California DMV, the California Public Utilities Commission, NHTSA, the US Department of Justice, and the SEC, have opened investigations or made inquiries in connection with the incident,” GM outlined in the report. “We and Cruise are investigating these matters internally and intend to cooperate with all government regulators and agencies in connection with these matters. At this time, we are not able to predict when Cruise will resume driverless testing or commercial AV operations.”

GM acquired Cruise in 2016 for $1.1 billion. In 2021, Cruise played a starring role in GM’s guidance to double revenue by 2030. Cruise was projected to increase its sales to $50 billion by the end of the decade from virtually nothing at the time.

General Motors continued its public support of Cruise but acknowledged it will be updating its strategy for the autonomous driving unit.General Motors continued its public support of Cruise but acknowledged it will be updating its strategy for the autonomous driving unit.

General Motors continued its public support of Cruise but acknowledged it will be updating its strategy for the autonomous driving unit.

Auto experts tell Yahoo Finance that Cruise’s major stumbles highlight the challenges of safely scaling up driverless taxis and whether they need to exist at all. GM may be better served by following the path of its peers and permanently shelving Cruise, given the hit to public trust in the brand.

“Cruise is a distraction for General Motors,” said Gregory Migliore, editor in chief of Autoblog, a sister publication to Yahoo Finance. “It’s a troubled company whose time may never come.”

If the headlines aren’t enough for GM to wave goodbye to Cruise, then the numbers perhaps would do the trick.

Cruise generated a mere $102 million in sales last year and lost $2.7 billion on an adjusted operating basis, per GM’s annual report. In 2023 and 2022, Cruise lost a combined $4.6 billion on an adjusted operating basis as GM invested in the segment’s autonomous tech and platform more broadly.

The $102 million in sales for Cruise is a fraction of the $141.4 billion GM generated from selling cars, trucks, and SUVs in North America last year.

Associated Press reporter Michael Liedtke sits in the back of a Cruise driverless taxi that picked him up in San Francisco's Mission District, Feb. 15, 2023. Associated Press reporter Michael Liedtke sits in the back of a Cruise driverless taxi that picked him up in San Francisco's Mission District, Feb. 15, 2023.

GM has paused the operations of its Cruise robotaxi business. (Terry Chea/AP Photo, File) (ASSOCIATED PRESS)

“Cruise, and the now-defunct Argo AI, highlight the dangers of trying to create a market without demand,” Migliore continued. “Frankly, nobody is asking for robot taxis. Ford and Volkswagen were smart to pull the plug on Argo AI in 2022 and reallocate those resources to driver assistance technology consumers will actually get in cars. I think it’s curious GM has stayed with Cruise for so long, when the automaker has shown an ability to adapt in other areas, like its recent pivot back to hybrids.”

With GM spending billions of dollars to roll out electric vehicles, an argument could be made that EVs should be the area of focus, not Cruise robotaxis that would somehow challenge nonexistent Tesla (TSLA) robotaxis.

To that end, GM’s annual report shows the Cruise division has $1.3 billion in cash on hand that could likely be allocated to more productive venues.

Staying committed to Cruise’s original vision also doesn’t align with a GM in the process of cutting billions in costs and being more shareholder friendly — as seen in a massive new $10 billion stock buyback.

“We see capital allocation as the primary catalyst that is likely to lead to a re-rating in the shares,” JPMorgan analyst Ryan Brinkman explained in a note to clients.

There continues to be some support for Cruise on Wall Street, though it has waned considerably in the past 12 months of negative headlines.

“I think Cruise is essential to the future of GM, as autonomous is a next-generation technology that will transform the auto world,” Wedbush analyst Dan Ives told Yahoo Finance. “We see by 2030 10% of cars will be autonomous and GM wants in on that market with Tesla well ahead.”

Ives gave GM stock an Outperform rating with a $40 price target, about 5.2% above current levels.

Brian Sozzi is Yahoo Finance’s Executive Editor. Follow Sozzi on Twitter/X @BrianSozzi and on LinkedIn. Tips on deals, mergers, activist situations, or anything else? Email brian.sozzi@yahoofinance.com.

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