According to Reuters, the sale would allow Lyft to focus on hosting the technology of self-driving firms on its platform through partnerships as opposed to internally developing the expensive technology which has yet to become mainstream. Lyft will get paid $US200 million (~RM819.7 million) upfront, with US$350 million (~RM1.4 billion) in payments to follow over a five-year period. The transaction, which is still subject to regulatory approval, is expected to close in the third quarter of this year.
The e-hailing company reported a loss of US$458.2 million (~RM1.9 billion) in the fourth quarter of 2020. If the deal goes through on time and COVID-19 recovery continues, it expects to achieve profit in the third quarter of this year. Under the deal, Lyft’s Level 5 team would join Toyota subsidiary Woven Planet, which works on connected vehicle, autonomous and semi-autonomous driving technology. Woven Planet is a new entity, established only in January. Reuters noted that Lyft already allows people to book rides in self-driving vehicles in some cities thanks to partnerships with Alphabet’s Waymo and Motional, a joint venture between Hyundai Motor and Aptiv. (Source: Reuters, Lyft [1] [2])