For nearly a decade, technologists and business titans have predicted that self-driving cars are on the verge of going mainstream.
Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) CEO Elon Musk has been talking up his vision of a robotaxi network for more than a decade, despite relatively little to show for it.
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However, it now seems that the dream of self-driving cars is coming closer to reality. Alphabet’s (NASDAQ: GOOG) (NASDAQ: GOOGL) Waymo, the industry leader, is now performing 500,000 fully autonomous rides per week in 11 cities. Tesla has begun offering a small-scale robotaxi network in Austin, Dallas, Houston, and the Bay Area, and has ambitions of rapidly expanding it.
If robotaxis go mainstream, they could be a trillion-dollar industry as they threaten to upend the entire transportation industry.
Tesla and Alphabet are the most obvious names in the space, but they’re not the best choice to get exposure, in part because they are already huge companies, and Waymo or Tesla’s robotaxis would have to grow exponentially to move the needle for their parent companies.
However, there’s one chip stock that’s well-positioned to capitalize on the growth of robotaxis and the expected boom in robotics. That’s Arm Holdings (NASDAQ: ARM), best known for its power-efficient CPUs, which make it a preferred choice in technologies such as autonomous vehicles and robots.
What Arm is doing with Physical AI
The vast majority of the semiconductor industry is focused on data-center chips, which are powering AI models from OpenAI and Anthropic, and that business has become huge.
However, Physical AI, or AI in products like autonomous robots and cars, could be just as big. Reuters reported in January that the company reorganized to create a Physical AI unit, one of three main lines of business.
In an interview with The Motley Fool, CFO Jason Child addressed the company’s potential in robotics and physical AI.
Child said Arm has a strong position with electric vehicle makers, and Tesla, along with all of Elon Musk’s companies, uses Arm-based chips. He also estimated that the company has an 80% market share in CPUs for automotive and robotics, noting that Arm is in robots made by Tesla, Boston Dynamics, and Chinese manufacturers. Arm is also in Nvidia’s Jetson Thor, which is considered the leading robotics chip.
