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thematic equities

February 2017
Marketing Material

Digital disruption: driverless technology

From driverless cars to delivery drones autonomous vehicle technology is  becoming a reality – opening up new investment opportunities.

 

In the 1980s hit TV series “Knight Rider”, jet-black KITT offered a tempting vision of a car of the future – fully self-driving, and complete with a mind-boggling array of features including a turbo boost, a medical scanner, a lie detector and even a dry sense of humour.

Three decades later, sentient vehicles are still firmly in the realm of science fiction, but self-driving ones are within reach. The scenario presented in “I, Robot” – where Will Smith enjoys a nap as his silver Audi RSQ speeds seamlessly down the highway, before taking control of a steering wheel which emerges out of the dashboard – may now be mere years away from reality. Driverless buses and autonomous long-distance lorries aren’t far behind.

Consultancy McKinsey forecasts that up to 15 per cent of passenger vehicles sold globally in 2030 will be fully autonomous cars, while revenues in the automotive sector could nearly double to USD6.7 trillion thanks to shared mobility (car-sharing, e-hailing) and data connectivity services (including apps and car software upgrades).1
race to the driverless car
Key milestones from the past year
Race to the driveless car
Source: Pictet Asset Management

New players such as Tesla Motors, tech giants from Google to Microsoft2 and a host of start-ups are competing against – and often working with – traditional manufactures like Ford, General Motors and Nissan to make such predictions into reality.

Safety first

Even if technology,  regulation barriers and ethical dilemmas delay the commercial-scale launch of fully driverless cars beyond 2020, partial automation is already on the way with the introduction and ongoing refinement of advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS).3 This market alone is expected to grow to USD34 billion by 2020 – representing a compound annual growth rate of 40 per cent – as  the global penetration rate triples to 48 per cent.4

One key area for technological improvement – and thus potential investment opportunities – is security. In the United States alone, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) estimates that motor vehicle crashes cost the economy almost USD1 trillion a year, including the loss of productivity. Top causes of accidents include people getting distracted or drowsy, driving under the influence, speeding and not wearing seatbelts. As human beings we are clearly fallible, and one way to improve safety could be to give greater control to technology.

Swedish manufacturer of car safety gear, Autoliv5, estimates that its products  – which include a wide range of driver assist radars and an infrared night vision system alongside improved airbag and seatbelt technology – help save 30,000 lives a year and prevent 10 times as many injuries.

Talking cars

While your car is unlikely to start telling you jokes, as KITT does to Michael Knight, it may well soon be able to recognise your voice or gestures, and to “talk” to other vehicles and even to emergency services.

Cars could soon warn each other about traffic jams or dangerous road conditions, as well as communicating with bridges and traffic lights.

 

The 2017 top-of-the-range cars from Cadillac and Mercedes-Benz are some of the first to include vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) communication technology. At its simplest level, V2V will enable cars to share their position, speed, steering-wheel position and brake status with each other to help spot incoming vehicles and reduce the likelihood of crashes. Taken to the next level, cars could warn each other about traffic jams and dangerous road conditions, as well as “communicating” with bridges and traffic lights.

An eCall feature – set to be mandatory for all new car in Europe from April 2018 – will automatically contact the emergency services in case of a serious accident, communicating the location of the vehicle and other details. This measure alone is expected to save more than 1,000 lives per year.

Robots in charge?

The latest automotive technology is already deeply rooted in the world of robotics and artificial intelligence. The machine-vision systems developed by Israeli driving assistant software maker Mobileye6, for example, have been trained to identify pedestrians, monitor blind spots and decode traffic signs.

France’s Valeo6, meanwhile, is working on a new generation parking system which will enable drivers to leave the car and then use a smartphone to instruct the vehicle to park itself. In the drone world, Amazon7 is one of several companies currently carrying out testing of light unmanned craft, with the eventual intention of offering customers automated deliveries within just 30 minutes.

The autonomous vehicle (AV) revolution is also spreading to the skies with the development of drones for the delivery of everything from parcels to organ transports, monitoring crop growth, mapping and photographing hard to reach areas and more.

the flying av
Dawn of the drones
Use of drones
Source: Pictet Asset Management

Beyond transportation, robotic AVs are finding application in the industrial world. Online retail giant Amazon, for example, uses bright-orange autonomous robots to move goods and parcels around its warehouses. Hospitals, meanwhile, are embracing a breed of mobile machines to transport lab specimens, medicine and other supplies, and another one which can sterilise rooms by killing germs with blasts of light. In the energy sector, remotely operated underwater vehicles (ROVs) can go out in conditions which are too rough or water which are too deep for humans to inspect pipelines and drilling platforms.

There are, of course, still many hurdles to overcome. For fully automated cars – which do not need a driver – these  include yet-to-be-developed technology, winning public trust for an essentially new mode of transportation and the need for new rules and regulations on everything from the highway code to car insurance.

For drones, developers need to resolve issues over battery life and find a way to safely coexist with all the other flying objects and beings in the sky.

Over time, though, the trend is clearly for robots to take on greater and greater control of our roads and skies. For investors, this is an opportunity to get behind the wheel of change sweeping through the transportation industry.