The Economist Asia - 27.01.2018

(Grace) #1
54 Business The EconomistJanuary 27th 2018

2 leader. A scorecard issued annually by Na-
vigant, a consultancy, putsGM ahead of
the AVpack of carmakers and tech firms,
with Alphabet’s Waymo in second place.
ThatGMis ahead of Silicon Valley’s
risk-takers may seem surprising. But earlier
investments, which were once looked on
with scepticism, seem to be paying off.
Alan Batey, GM’s president for North
America, points to the manufacturing of
mass-market long-range EVs, where the
firm has a lead. The Chevy Bolt, the world’s
first such vehicle, has been on sale for over
a year, beating Tesla’s Model 3 and the new
Nissan LEAF to market.
The Bolt is supposed to be the basis for
an ambitiousautonomous ride-sharing
business. On January 12th GM announced
the latest version of itsCruise AV, a Bolt-
based robotaxi without a steering wheel
or pedals. GM plans to use it to launch a
commercial scheme in several cities, start-
ing next year. Rival tech firms and carmak-
ers are only running, or are planning to
launch, small test projects.

Revenge of the robotaxis
When GMpaid $1bn in 2016 for Cruise, an
artificial-intelligence startup, many an-
alysts wondered whether it was throwing
away money. But the marriage of cutting-
edge technology and large-scale manufac-
turing seems to be paying off. The carmak-
er has learned to be more nimble; Cruise
has picked up how to make its fiddly tech-
nology robustenough for the open road.
As a result, GMcan now mass-produce
self-driving cars, says Dan Ammann, sec-
ond-in-command to Ms Barra. Scale will
help steeply to reduce the cost of sensors,
which are the key components of an AV.
The firm is being rewarded because, un-
like other carmakers, it has assembled all
the parts of the puzzle youneed to build
new transport services, says Stephanie
Brinley ofIHS Markit, a consultancy. But
even ifGMis no longer a dinosaur, risks re-
main. In particular, it may be too bullish in
its estimate ofthe market for robotaxis and
it may be placing too much faith in the
benefits of being the first to market.
The company expects demand to ex-
pand quickly. Costs of ride-hailing ser-
vices, it predicts, will fall from $2.50 a mile
now to about $1 as the main expense—the
driver—iseliminated. In America alone it
would be able to tap a market worth
around $1.6trn a year (representing three-
quarters of all miles travelled) as drivers
are lured from their cars to robotaxis. But
what Mr Ammann callsthis “very big busi-
ness opportunity” comes with an inconve-
nient corollary. As car buyers become car
users, GM’s legacy business supplying ve-
hicles to drive will decline accordingly.
Critics think thatGM may have acceler-
ated too swiftly and that it will have to en-
dure years of losses before robotaxis take
off. Even ifthings move fast, points out Be-

renberg, another bank, GMmay not be the
one to benefit. The main constraint in
growing a ride-hailing business now is ac-
quiring drivers. But when these are elimi-
nated, capital will be the only limit. And
that could mean huge fleets of robotaxis
chasing passengers, forcing prices down.
Riders may then choose a brand they re-
cognise, such as Uber and Lyft, rather than
Maven, GM’s ride-hailing business.
If so, being first would confer little ad-
vantage. And yet, if carmakers do not want
to accept their fate passively, they have lit-
tle choice but to remodel themselves. The
outsized Silverado and the sensor-packed
Cruise AV show thatGM has the present in
hand—and that it is at least doing its best to
safeguard its future. 7

T


HE tech industry hardly needs another
reminder that trustbustersare on its
case. But the European Commission is al-
ways happy to oblige. On January 24th Eu-
rope’s executive body slapped a penalty of
€1bn ($1.2bn) on Qualcomm, one of the
world’s largest chip-designers, for abusing
its dominance in baseband processors, a
critical component in mobile phones.
Large fines are becoming something of
a habit for Qualcomm, which will have
paid out nearly $1bn a year, on average, to
trustbustersthe world over since 2015. This
week’s penalty, which amounts to nearly
5% of the company’s global annual rev-
enue, is a reflection of what Margrethe Ves-

tager, the European competition commis-
sioner, described as its “very illegal
behaviour” between 2011 and 2016. During
that time, according to Ms Vestager, the
company attempted to shore up its domi-
nant position—it is estimated to supply up
to four-fifths of essential types of base-
band chips—by paying Apple, its biggest
customer, billions of dollars in return for
being its exclusive supplier.
The commission ruled that the strings
attached to these payments—which in-
cluded a clawback of part of the money,
should Apple use other suppliers—acted to
shut rivals out of the market. According to
internal documents from the time, Apple
had long considered sourcing its chips
from Intel, but it did not actually do so until
2016, after its deal with Qualcomm had ex-
pired. (The chipmaker insists that its prac-
tices did notviolate European Union rules,
and plans to appeal against the commis-
sion’s decision.)
Qualcomm’s pricing strategy, too, has
won it few friends in recent years. Most
contentious is the way in which it licenses
its intellectual property to device-makers,
charging them a percentage of the total sell-
ing price of their devices. Apple alleges that
such royalties act as a tax on any innova-
tive features it adds to its products, and is
yet another way in which the chipmaker is
abusing its market power. Apple is seeking
damages of over $1bn from the chipmaker
in lawsuits filed both in China and Califor-
nia. Regulators in Taiwan, South Korea and
China have already extracted penalties for
the licensing model; an investigation by
America’s Federal Trade Commission,
launched last year, isunder way.
In a rare bit of good news for the chip-
maker, regulators in Europe and South Ko-
rea last week gave their blessing to Qual-
comm’s $47bn acquisition ofNXP, another
chip-design firm. Qualcomm hopes the
purchase will help it to boost itsbusiness
in 5Gchips and the “internet of things”, as
connected devices are collectively called.
But Ms Vestager is not quite finished with
the firm. The commission is yet to rule on
whether it also engaged in predatory pric-
ing between 2009 and 2011 by setting the
prices of certain chips below cost, alleged-
ly to force a competitor out of the market.
The continued uncertainty, and Qual-
comm’s hefty penalties so far, may give the
company’s own predator, Broadcom, a ri-
val chipmaker, more ammunition. Its
$130bn offer for Qualcomm was rebuffed
last year; a heated proxy fight at Qual-
comm’s annual investor meeting in March
seems likely. Qualcomm argues that regu-
latorswill never bless the union, which
would be the largest-ever tech deal. But
Broadcom reportedly plans to end the li-
censing model if it is allowed to make the
purchase, which would probably draw the
battle with Apple to a close. That is some-
thing for trustbusters to chew on. 7

Qualcomm’s woes

A fine habit


The chipmaker is fined again for
anti-competitive practices

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