self-driving vehicles Group invests $1.15B into GM Cruise


Associated Press

DETROIT

A group of institutional investors is sinking $1.15 billion into GM Cruise LLC, the autonomous vehicle unit of General Motors.

Cruise announced the investment from a group led by T. Rowe Price on Tuesday and said it included money from GM, Honda and Japanese tech investment firm SoftBank.

CEO Dan Ammann said in a statement the investment gives Cruise deep resources to draw on as it develops and deploys self-driving vehicles.

Ray Wert, a spokesman for the GM unit, would not disclose other investors, but the statement said the deal includes funds and accounts advised by Baltimore-based T. Rowe Price.

The investment brings Cruise’s valuation to $19 billion, the statement said. It comes in addition to $2.75 billion from Honda Motor Co. in October 2018 and $2.25 billion from SoftBank in May of last year.

Tuesday’s announcement brings investments in Cruise during the past year to $7.25 billion, including money kicked in by the parent company, GM.

The investment comes as automakers and tech companies seek help to cover the tremendous capital cost of developing autonomous vehicles with an uncertain date for getting a return on their capital.

The potential to make money is tremendous for companies that can cut the cost of transporting humans or delivering goods.

Cruise would not disclose how the investors would be repaid or its ownership structure. “We’re not speaking to the terms and conditions at this time,” Wert said.

Investors in startups typically get their money back through profit sharing, when the company is spun off with a public stock offering, or when it is acquired by another company.

Cruise is considered among the leaders in the race to deploy autonomous vehicles without human backup drivers.

It has pledged to do that in an unspecified city sometime this year, but recently has backed away.