BMW teams up with tech firms for driverless cars: source
The logo of Intel is seen during the annual Computex computer exhibition in Taipei, Taiwan June 1, 2016. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu -
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By Eric Auchard and Edward Taylor
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - BMW
The tie-up is likely to focus on technology being developed by Mobileye (NYSE: MBLY) to give computer-driven vehicles better reflexes without driver input, ushering in an era of self-driving cars early in the next decade, analysts said.
The three companies said they would hold a joint news conference on Friday, without giving details. It will be attended by BMW Chief Executive Harald Krueger, Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) CEO Brian Krzanich and Mobileye Chairman and Chief Technology Officer Amnon Shashua, they said.
Automakers and technology firms are striking new alliances to commercialize self-driving cars after being caught off guard by big investments by Silicon Valley companies such as Google (NASDAQ: GOOGL), Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) and Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) into the field.
This week German carmakers, auto-suppliers and map makers HERE and TomTom
Earlier in June, BMW, the world's largest luxury carmaker by sales, said it would launch a new flagship model with autonomous driving capability in 2021. (http://reut.rs/2861tb5)
"We anticipate that Intel has been tapped to provide the (central processor unit) needed at the vehicle level, the computer that coordinates the myriad components of the car in combination with Mobileye's ... software," Evercore financial analyst Arndt Ellinghorst said in note to clients.
Intel is the world's biggest computer chipmaker and has been seeking to break into the market for automotive chips where rivals NXP (NASDAQ: NXPI), Renesas <6723.T>, Infineon
Mobileye is the top supplier of camera-based sensor systems used in driver assistance systems in the latest generation of vehicles. These systems are used for changing lanes and to detect other cars or pedestrians but are expected to evolve to include mapping and automated decision-making features.
AUTONOMOUS DRIVING ALLIANCES
Terms of the three-way deal are not yet known, nor is it clear how the pact between Intel and Mobileye might affect the Israeli firm's long-standing partnership with French-Italian chipmaker STMicroelectronics (NYSE: STM), which manufactures Mobileye sensor systems.
A spokesman for STMicroelectronics declined to comment.
In May, Mobileye and STMicro said they had agreed to extend a 12-year-old partnership to develop a fifth-generation Mobileye system, which they said would provide fully autonomous driving features for cars due to hit the road around 2020.
These new systems will revolve around a computer chip, or central processing unit, that controls some 20 sensors throughout each vehicle, including the windshield and car bumpers, connected to radar systems, Mobileye and STMicro said.
BMW, which has been a key customer of Mobileye systems dating back to its first-generation of sensors in 2007, is one of five automakers expected to deploy Mobileye's fourth-generation safety systems for new cars beginning in 2018, which primarily focus on object detection as cars move down the road.
Citi said in a research note that a BMW-Intel-Mobileye tie-up was likely to focus on Mobileye's fifth-generation chips, dubbed EyeQ5, which move beyond safety features to offer real-time road mapping and driving policy, which dictates how a vehicle interacts with other cars or roadside objects.
In recent months, Volkswagen Group
Speaking at a William Blair investor conference in mid-June, Mobileye Chief Financial Officer Ofer Maharshak said his company would have more customers for these new systems to announce in coming months.
"You know three are already engaged, Nissan, VW, and GM. We are going to have four or five - between four to five others in the next months, up to the beginning of 2017," he said.
"First full autonomous car on the roads, 2021 timeframe. It's going to be probably announced in the coming weeks," Maharshak declared.
(Editing by Elaine Hardcastle and Mark Potter)
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