By Akash Sriram and Jaspreet Singh
Jan 7 (Reuters) - Aurora Innovation's AUR.O shares
rose 38% in premarket trading on Tuesday after the self-driving
technology developer announced a long-term deal with Nvidia and
Germany's Continental to deploy self-driving trucks.
Uber UBER.N -backed Aurora's stock has nearly doubled in
the past 12 months, as investors bet that the market for
autonomous driving technology used in trucks will grow rapidly
in the coming years.
"Nvidia's CEO has been clear that he sees huge potential in
the autonomous driving space over the next few years," said
Danni Hewson, head of financial analysis at AJ Bell.
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania-based Aurora already has
partnerships with truck makers including PACCAR PCAR.O and
Volvo VOLVb.ST to develop and test its self-driving system,
Aurora Driver, on their trucks.
Aurora plans to launch its driverless trucking service in
Texas in April, the company said on Monday.
"Many investors may have only heard the name Aurora
Innovation for the first time today and its association with
Nvidia and Continental is a tantalizing one, but this is a space
with a huge amount of competition and requiring a massive amount
of investment," Hewson said.
Under the deal, Nvidia's NVDA.O computing platform DRIVE
Thor, designed to centralize autonomous and assisted driving as
well as other digital functions, and its automotive operating
system, DriveOS, will be integrated into the Aurora Driver
system.
Continental CONG.DE will mass produce this system in 2027,
to enable a large-scale deployment of self-driving trucks.
(Reporting by Akash Sriram and Jaspreet Singh in Bengaluru;
Editing by Shinjini Ganguli)
((Akash.Sriram@thomsonreuters.com; On X as @HoodieOnVeshti;
+91-74116-87774;))