Vision Chip Maker Drives Boom in Autonomous Vehicles

The automotive world is making an important digital transformation. Cars and trucks are getting safer and smarter thanks to silicon and software that makes sense of the real world.

The digital future of automobiles is here. One smart way investors can play the trend is with component suppliers.

There’s a disconnect … too many investors assume that self-driving cars will mark the coming out party for makers of smart technology. To get to truly autonomous vehicles, known as AVs for short, there are many regulatory hurdles, not to mention the cost of the expensive technology needed collect and make sense of data.

This rationalization misses the point because the technology is here now.

It’s being implemented at scale in current advanced driver assistance systems. These ADASs could be braking systems that automatically slow the vehicle if the driver follows too closely, steering protocols that force the vehicle to swerve to avoid accidents or even advanced cruise control. All of these technologies use some combination of cameras, radar and software to make current cars much safer.

If investors wait for the arrival of AVs, they will have missed the best part of the opportunity.

One company already playing a huge role in the overall AV trend is Ambarella, Inc. (Nasdaq: AMBA).

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Executives at the company reported on Tuesday that it shipped 300,000 computer vision enabled microprocessors to car companies last quarter alone.

It’s an interesting business to say the least. Only five years ago, its survival depended on providing video compression silicon to GoPro, Inc. (Nasdaq: GPRO), a maker of action video recording gear. Ambarella CEO Fermi Wang realized there was no future being tied to what is essentially an expensive toy for adults. He guided the company in a new direction.

As solid-state storage prices careened lower and the cloud gained popularity, security video became a vibrant new market. Wang saw an opportunity to embed artificial intelligence, specifically computer vision, into the chips Ambarella designed. Its CV system on chip designs have been a big hit with companies that supply integrated circuit boards to surveillance camera makers and vehicle manufacturers.

In a press release, Wang noted that demand for Ambarella AI silicon has attracted 175 unique customers in fiscal 2021. More than 40 firms have entered production.

Meanwhile, the other part of the business is ramping nicely, too. AVs are coming.

Motional, a Boston-based maker of driverless car technology, announced Tuesday that its AVs will use Ambarella’s CVflow family of processors. Motional managers boast the company is one of only a handful of businesses that have ever been approved to operate fleets of driverless vehicles on public roads.

In February, the company began offering rides in Las Vegas. Multiple driverless Motional vans have navigated intersections, made unprotected turns and interacted with pedestrians, according to a company blog post.

It’s noteworthy that Motional is a close business partner with Aptiv PLC (NYSE: APTV), an Ireland-based auto parts and services business.

Aptiv is definitely working toward full AVs. It has a dedicated business unit and major partnership with Hyundai Motor Co. (OTCPK: HYMLF) devoted to taking human drivers out of vehicles. That’s the longer-term business plan. In the interim, Aptiv managers are focused on ADAS. It’s the lion’s share of the business, and it’s booming.

The Irish company is a pioneer in adaptive cruise control. It was also the first automotive parts company to build radar systems for original equipment manufacturers. Now, managers are integrating ADAS with forward-looking technologies like connectivity and digital architectures to make those safety systems modular.

This is why the Ambarella announcement about automotive chip shipments is so important.

It reveals the transition to smarter vehicles has already begun. The process is happening one step at a time and it will involve many companies.

Related Post: 4 Stocks for the New Age of Electric and Connected Cars

Today’s computer vision from Ambarella helps companies like Aptiv build better ADAS systems. In the future, that silicon may be the basis for full autonomy.

Ambarella shares trade at 206 times forward earnings and 18.6 times sales. Aptiv stock is priced at 31 times forward earnings and 3.1 times sales. Despite the disparity in valuations, both issues are attractive into weakness.

 

The digital transformation of the auto industry is going to drive a lot of wealth creation.

Best wishes,

Jon D. Markman

About the Editor

Jon D. Markman is winner of the prestigious Gerald Loeb Award for outstanding financial journalism and the Society of Professional Journalists' Sigma Delta Chi award. He was also on Los Angeles Times staffs that won Pulitzer Prizes for coverage of the 1992 L.A. riots and the 1994 Northridge earthquake. He invented Microsoft’s StockScouter, the world’s first online app for analyzing and picking stocks.

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