Waymo and $16 Billion: Robotaxis Are Now Worth More Than Auto Majors
Sixteen billion dollars. Let that sink in for a moment. This isn't a company valuation—it's the size of the check investors just wrote to Waymo. If you…
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Sixteen billion dollars. Let that sink in for a moment. This isn't a company valuation—it's the size of the check investors just wrote to Waymo. If you thought the hype around autonomous vehicles had died down after competitors stumbled, Alphabet just proved you wrong, and in the most convincing way possible—with money.
Following the close of this round, Waymo's valuation reached $126 billion. To put the scale of this disaster for traditional automakers in perspective: this places a software and sensor developer above most of the automotive giants who have been manufacturing hardware for a century. The robotaxi market has stopped being a "promising startup" within Google and has become a titan capable of absorbing state budgets.
The list of those who put money into this round reads like a guest list from a private party in Davos. Besides Alphabet itself, which continues to believe in its creation, the round included Dragoneer, DST Global, Sequoia, Andreessen Horowitz (a16z), Mubadala, Silver Lake, Tiger Global, and Temasek. These are so-called "smart money." When such funds enter a late-stage project with checks of this size, they're not playing the lottery. They're betting on an IPO and market dominance.
Why does this matter right now? The past year has been, to put it mildly, turbulent for the autonomous driving industry. Cruise (GM's subsidiary) stumbled over safety and licensing issues, Apple quietly buried its Titan project, and Tesla continues to feed us promises of "full self-driving next year." Against this backdrop, Waymo looks like the only adult in the room. They've been slowly but steadily rolling out service in San Francisco, Phoenix, and Los Angeles, avoiding major scandals.
Attracting external investors of this caliber is a strategic move by Alphabet. First, it's validation. When only Google invests in Waymo, you can write it off as a corporate hobby. When Sequoia and a16z invest—it's business. Second, it's risk mitigation. Scaling a robotaxi fleet requires colossal capital expenditures (CAPEX), and even Google's printing press isn't infinite.
Now Waymo has a giant war chest to crush competitors technologically and geographically. Expect aggressive expansion into new cities and perhaps licensing their technology to other automakers who realized they can't write this software themselves.
The bottom line: Waymo has essentially declared victory in the technology race. With $16 billion in the bank, they can survive any crisis and wait for competitors to burn out. The only question now is: when will we see the WAYMO ticker on the stock exchange?
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