Surprise! General Motors Company Stock is The Top Self-Driving Car Pick

The autonomous car war is not only heating up, but it’s also getting messy. Most recently, General Motors Company (NYSE:GM) has entered discussions with ride-sharing service Uber… an interesting move, considering it wasn’t that long ago the carmaker told GM stock owners it was investing half a billion dollars in Uber’s rival Lyft to help advance its self-driving vehicle ambitions.

Surprise! General Motors Company Stock is The Top Self-Driving Car Pick
Surprise! General Motors Company Stock is The Top Self-Driving Car Pick

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If the news seems vaguely familiar to owners of Alphabet Inc (NASDAQ:GOOGL), there’s a reason (though the opposite one). A few years back, Alphabet teamed up with Uber to help develop and commercialize its Waymo autonomous driving technology, but this month Alphabet invested $1 billion in Lyft. The investment more or less implies a partnership.

In the meantime, Ford Motor Company (NYSE:F) — arguably the laggard “major” when it comes to self-driving cars — is also working with Lyft, while Tesla Inc (NASDAQ:TSLA) isn’t (officially) teaming up with any ride-hailing outfit despite being the furthest along in self-driving vehicles.

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It’s an awful lot of jockeying and alliance-formation, begging just one question from current and prospective owners of GM stock: Where is General Motors, really, with its autonomous car platform?

Answer: Closer to the endzone than you might realize.

(Almost) Ready to Roll

If you live in Manhattan and you see a driverless Chevy Bolt on your streets early in the coming year, don’t freak out. It’s under control, directed by a complex orchestration of cameras and sensors.

Actually, you won’t see a truly driverless GM car on the streets of New York City just yet. Two people will be in the vehicle during this all-important test, just to make sure the driving system doesn’t do anything squirrely or dangerous. The company is assuming, however, that the vehicle is going to perform exactly as expected.

Don’t look for a successful test of General Motors so-called “Cruise” technology to instantaneously drive the GM stock price higher. Truth be told, the company’s already got self-driving cars being tested on the busy streets of other major cities. On the other hand, if its Cruise platform can handle the crazy driving conditions in Manhattan… Well, like the song says: “If it can make it there, it can make it anywhere…”

But what does this mean in terms of a time horizon? Nobody really knows, though Deutsche Bank research analyst Rod Lache recently commented about General Motors’ autonomous car capabilities, “We now believe that these may be deployed without human drivers within the next six quarters (potentially years ahead of competitors).”