China’s autonomous vehicle startup WeRide seeks US IPO at $5B valuation

Date:

Share post:


WeRide, a Chinese autonomous vehicle company, is officially gearing up for a U.S. public debut, over a year after China started easing its effective ban of foreign IPOs. The company is seeking a valuation as high as $5.02 billion in its initial public offering.

WeRide expects to raise about $96 million from its offering, or $111.3 million if its underwriters exercise their over-allotment option in full, assuming an IPO share price of $17 per American Depository Share (ADS). The company is offering 6.45 million ADSs at a price range of $15.50 and $18.50 per share, so it could even raise as much as $119.4 million in the IPO.

On top of that, certain investors have already agreed to purchase shares worth $320.5 million in a concurrent private placement. For example, Alliance Ventures, the venture arm of the Renault Nissan Mitsubishi Alliance, has agreed to buy $97 million worth of shares. Other investors include JSC International Investment Fund, Get Ride, and Beijing Minghong, according to a regulatory filing.

The filing comes after Bloomberg reported that WeRide is seeking up to $400 million in its IPO and private placement, citing sources familiar with the matter. About $100 million of that would come from the IPO and around $200 million to $300 million in the placement.

WeRide did not respond in time to comment.

If and when WeRide goes public, this will be the largest IPO by a Chinese company on the U.S. stock market since Geely-owned luxury EV startup Zeekr began selling shares on the New York Stock Exchange in May. Zeekr’s stock has fallen 48% since its debut. 

WeRide initially filed confidentially to go public in the U.S. in March 2023. The AV company has raised a total of $1.39 billion at a $5.11 billion valuation, per PitchBook data. But WeRide hasn’t raised a private round since 2022, and VCs have pulled back from writing large checks for autonomous vehicle companies with long roads to profitability. If WeRide hopes to scale and stay competitive, it’ll need to access the public markets. 

The company holds permits to operate autonomously in China, the UAE and Singapore. It also has permits to test with a driver and without a driver in California, and is actively testing in San Jose. Aside from a publicly accessible robotaxi operation, WeRide is working on a driverless robobus, robovan (for goods delivery) and robosweeper. The company also offers advanced driver assistance systems and plans to sell them to OEMs. 

WeRide’s revenue for the first six months of 2024 was $20.7 million, which is lower than the first half of 2023’s revenue of about $25.5 million, according to a regulatory filing. That’s on a loss of $121.3 million for the first half of 2024, and of $100.9 million in the first half of 2023. 

Per WeRide’s filing, the company plans to spend 35% of the proceeds from its IPO on R&D; 30% on commercialization and operation of its autonomous driving fleets, as well as marketing activities to expand to new markets; 25% on capital expenditures like the purchase of test vehicles; and the remaining 10% for general corporate purposes.

WeRide isn’t the only Chinese AV company that’s looking to try its luck on the U.S. markets. Pony.ai, one of its main competitors, is also reportedly preparing for a U.S. IPO again, after its previous efforts fell apart in 2021. Pony was eyeing a public debut at a $12 billion valuation through a SPAC merger, but put it on hold as it struggled to gain assurances from Beijing that it wouldn’t become a target of a crackdown against Chinese firms going public on foreign exchanges. 

This article has been updated to include WeRide’s estimated valuation, the total amount it hopes to raise, and information about investment from private placement. This article was originally published August 9 at 10:15 am PT.



Source link

Lisa Holden
Lisa Holden
Lisa Holden is a news writer for LinkDaddy News. She writes health, sport, tech, and more. Some of her favorite topics include the latest trends in fitness and wellness, the best ways to use technology to improve your life, and the latest developments in medical research.

Recent posts

Related articles

Bugs in a major McDonald’s India delivery system exposed sensitive customer data

A major McDonald’s delivery system in India exposed the personal information of its customers and drivers due...

Apple and Meta go to war over interoperability vs. privacy

Apple and Meta are warring in Europe over the balance between interoperability and privacy, Reuters reports. The fight...

BlueQubit raises $10M to take Quantum software into real-world applications

Integrating quantum computing into real-world computer applications is an ongoing problem, as the platforms are architected fundamentally...

Indian startups raised 32% fewer rounds in 2024 as VCs got selective

Indian startups raised 32% fewer funding rounds in 2024 compared to last year, per new numbers from...

‘We want to pay it forward’: Funding Societies raises $25M to boost capital for SMEs in Southeast Asia

Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) account for nearly 50% of Southeast Asia’s GDP, contributing to job creation,...

Exclusive: Google’s Gemini is forcing contractors to rate AI responses outside their expertise

Generative AI may look like magic, but behind the development of these systems are armies of employees...

Canoo furloughs workers and idles factory as it scrapes for cash

Struggling EV startup Canoo says it has furloughed 82 employees and is idling its factory in Oklahoma...

New Anthropic study shows AI really doesn’t want to be forced to change its views

AI models can deceive, new research from Anthropic shows. They can pretend to have different views during...