General Motors Co (NYSE:GM) stock is down 1.3% to trade at $52.07 at last check, amid news that the company stopped funding the development of its Cruise robotaxi.
GM exited Cruise robotaxis after sinking $10 billion into their development. The post GM Stock Slides After Robotaxi U-Turn But Analysts See Upside appeared first on Investor's Business Daily.
General Motors said Tuesday it will no longer fund the development of a commercial robotaxi business and will instead absorb its self-driving car subsidiary Cruise and combine it with the automaker's own efforts to develop driver assistance features — and eventually fully autonomous personal vehicles.
Cruise founder Kyle Vogt criticized GM's decision to pull robotaxi funding. GM's decision to divest from Cruise comes as other tech giants forge ahead with robotaxi plans.
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General Motors just pulled the plug on Cruise's robotaxi dreams. The self-driving venture has been in doubt since a pedestrian was seriously injured last year.
General Motors Company is halting its Cruise robotaxi project to focus on driver assistance and core ICE and electric vehicle production. I previously rated GM stock a strong buy due to double-digit revenue growth and significant EV delivery momentum, despite concerns about the EV market slowdown. GM's restructuring allows the company to reinvest in its EV division or return cash to shareholders, enhancing long-term value.
General Motors' decision to pull the plug on its troubled Cruise robotaxi business highlights the harsh reality facing others still in the race: it requires a long-term commitment to perfect the technology and deep pockets to fund it.
General Motors Co. (NYSE: GM) has walked away from what many auto experts believe is a critical part of the industry's future just as Tesla Inc.
General Motors (GM) said it was abandoning its Cruise driverless ride-hailing service due to its high costs and the scale needed in an increasingly competitive market.
CNBC's Andrew Ross Sorkin reports on the latest news.