Intel agreed to buy driverless technology firm Mobileye positioning itself for a dominant role in the autonomous-driving sector after missing the market for mobile phones |
U.S. chipmaker Intel agreed to buy driverless technology firm Mobileye for $15.3 billion on Monday, positioning itself for a dominant role in the autonomous-driving sector after missing the market for mobile phones.
The $63.54 per share cash deal is the biggest technology takeover in Israelโs history and the largest purchase of a company solely focused on the self-driving sector.
Intel will integrate its automated driving group with Mobileyeโs operations, with the combined entity being run by Mobileye Chairman Amnon Shashua from Israel.
Intel Chief Executive Brian Krzanich said the acquisition, which unites Intelโs processors with Mobileyeโs computer vision, was akin to merging the โeyes of the autonomous car with the intelligent brain that actually drives the car.โ
Mobileye accounts for 70 percent of the global market for driver-assistance and anti-collision systems. It employs 660 people and had adjusted net income of $173.3 million last year.
Intel said it expected the transaction to close within the next nine months and to immediately boost its non-GAAP earnings per share and free cash flow.
The price represents a premium of around 33 percent to Mobileyeโs Friday closing price of $47 a share.
โItโs an area where the company (Intel) has had very little presence โ the automotive market, and so this is a tremendous opportunity for them to get into a market that has significant growth opportunities,โ said Betsy Van Hees, an analyst at Loop Capital Markets who has a โbuyโ rating on Intel shares.
โMobileyeโs technology is very critical โฆ The price seems fair,โ she added.
Because Mobileyeโs Shashua will remain in charge and the combined entity will be based in Israel, analysts said they expected it to be far more difficult for rivals to mount a counter offer for Mobileye.
Shashua and two other senior Mobileye executives stand to do well by the deal: together they own nearly 7 percent of the company. Shmuel Harlap, Israelโs biggest car importer and one of Mobileyeโs earliest investors, also holds a 7 percent stake.
Yossi Vardi, seen as the godfather of Israeli high-tech, said the deal was a big endorsement of the whole sector.
โIโm sure that this โฆ will be a very important impetus to create a whole industry related to autonomous and connected vehicles (in the country),โ he said.
BATTLE FOR SELF-CONTROL
Automakers and their suppliers have been expanding alliances in the race to develop self-driving cars, a sector that once seemed a science-fiction dream but is drawing closer to reality month after month.
Mobileye and Intel are already collaborating with German automaker BMW on a project to put a fleet of around 40 self-driving test vehicles on the road in the second half of this year.
At the same time, Mobileye has teamed up with Intel for its fifth-generation of chips that will be used in fully autonomous vehicles that are scheduled for delivery around 2021.
While Intel is known for hardware chips and Mobileye for collision detection software, their merger promises to create the most complete portfolio of technologies needed for driverless vehicles, including cameras, sensor chips, in-car networking, roadway mapping, machine learning and cloud software, as well as the data-centres needed to manage all the data involved.
Last October, Qualcomm announced a $47 billion deal to acquire the Netherlandsโ NXP, the largest automotive chip supplier, putting pressure on other chipmakers seeking to make inroads into the market for autonomous driving components, including Intel, Mobileye and rival NVIDIA.
The Qualcomm-NXP deal, which will create the industryโs largest portfolio of sensors, networking and other elements vital to autonomous driving, is expected to close later in 2017, subject to regulatory and shareholder approvals.
For a dozen years, Mobileye has relied on Franco-Italian chipmaker STMicroelectronics to produce chips that the Israeli company sells to many of the worldโs top automakers for its current, third-generation of driver-assistance systems.
Mobileyeโs relationships with automakers, leading suppliers and STMicroelectronics will continue uninterrupted, the companies said in their statement, and Mobileyeโs current product roadmap will not be affected.
Founded in 1999, Mobileye made its mission to reduce vehicle injuries and fatalities. After receiving an investment of $130 million from Goldman Sachs in 2007, it listed on the New York Stock Exchange in 2014.