If Apple built a car, here are the companies it would probably work with
Tim Cook
Tim Cook

(AP)

Earlier this week, it came out that Apple was kicking the tires on buying an existing stake in McLaren, a British automotive company best known for making million-dollar supercars.

A ton of Apple observers and stakeholders are taking this news as evidence that Apple knows it doesn't have the expertise to manufacture a car and is looking for an automotive partner to help it build factories and a supply chain.

Here are two reasons why that's wrong.

  • Apple doesn't actually do much manufacturing today. It contracts with firms like Foxconn and Pegatron to build its iPhones and Macs — and people don't think Foxconn is an Apple M&A target.

  • McLaren builds its cars by hand. Apple products are built at scale. A former Apple engineer currently in the automotive industry told Business Insider recently that Apple wouldn't be interested in a production process with lots of individual hands-on work.

What's most likely if Apple does decide to build a car is that it will need a key manufacturing partner — several, actually.

Apple will need the automotive equivalent of Samsung or Foxconn to build its car. It will need suppliers to provide things like electric motors, electronic components, and assembly services. And it will need those parts in high volume.

Apple could dip into some of its over $200 billion in cash to start the process. In the past, Apple has spent generously to build facilities to lease back to its key suppliers, which might not have had the capital to build the factories on their own. It's also reportedly financed facilities for companies that make key components for the iPhone.

So who might Apple work with? Morgan Stanley recently distributed a list of 30 companies that it thinks is best positioned to take advantage of the coming electric- and driverless-car waves — the same waves it looks like Apple is looking to ride.

Here are a few companies that Apple might need to work with to build a car:

Magna

Magna
Magna

(Markus Leodolter/AP Images)

Magna is the name that comes up most often when discussing Apple's car project, and for good reason. Magna is the world's largest contract manufacturer of vehicles, using its plants to make cars to specifications for brands like BMW and Mini.

Magna is reportedly already working with Apple, according to a new feature in Bloomberg about the Canadian-headquartered company. About a dozen Magna engineers are working with Apple in its secretive Sunnyvale, California, car facilities.

"We believe Magna-Steyr is in a singular position to help new entrants who may want to 'make' their own cars by playing a similar role to what Foxconn does today for Apple in the smartphone industry," Morgan Stanley advises.