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Hyundai Motor's robots herald hardware reboot
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HONG KONG, March 4 (Reuters Breakingviews) - Robots are hard at work for Hyundai Motor Co (005380.KS), opens new tab. Although cars generate the profit, its Boston Dynamics unit is more responsible for the sudden rise in market capitalisation. As investors increasingly value technological hardware as much as software, more companies across Asia will be rewarded.
The Hyundai conglomerate’s automotive shares have roughly doubled this year, compared to a 40% rise in the domestic benchmark index. Vehicles, including its Tucson SUV, power the bottom line. Hyundai Motor Co is on track for $9 billion of net profit next year, according to Visible Alpha. A basket of international peers trades at about 7.5 times earnings on average, which would impute roughly $70 billion of equity value.
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There’s also a stake in sister carmaker Kia (000270.KS), opens new tab, worth $16 billion, and $17 billion of book value from investments in other related companies, as of September. Korea Investment analysts appraise the financing division at $15 billion. Add it all up, slap on a 40% conglomerate discount, and the company is worth about $70 billion.
Hyundai Motor Co’s market value is now closer to $100 billion, however. Its rally began in January after Boston Dynamics showcased, opens new tab the Atlas humanoid cyborg at the annual consumer tech expo in Las Vegas and unveiled, opens new tab plans for mass production. Every scrap of related news since has stoked further excitement: the stock leapt 11% on Friday after Seoul said the Hyundai group would invest some $6 billion in an artificial intelligence data centre and robot factory.
It’s more than just hype. Hyundai is well-positioned to sell autonomous machines like its four-legged Spot, opens new tab, wheeled Mobed, opens new tab and biped Atlas. The group’s decision to buy an 80% stake in Boston Dynamics from SoftBank in 2021 accelerated a multi-decade push into the technology; Hyundai Motor Co owns a roughly 28% indirect holding. The parent’s broad portfolio also manufactures everything from ships to space exploration vehicles, enabling it to experiment and gather data for industrial applications. Essential components are also available internally.
China’s homegrown champions, such as Unitree, present formidable competition, but Hyundai is better positioned to tap the lucrative U.S. market, where higher labour costs make a compelling case for automating production. It’s already introducing Atlas to production lines in Georgia.
This dynamic will ripple across South Korea and Japan, where building a range of precision machines and components is a speciality largely overlooked while investors favoured coding experts selling subscriptions. Rainbow Robotics and gear-maker Nabtesco are among those picking up steam. It augurs yet more promise for rebooted hardware.
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Editing by Jeffrey Goldfarb; Production by Ujjaini Dutta
Breakingviews
Reuters Breakingviews is the world’s leading source of agenda-setting financial insight. As the Reuters brand for financial commentary, we dissect the big business and economic stories as they break around the world every day. A global team of about 30 correspondents in New York, London, Hong Kong and other major cities provides expert analysis in real time.
Sign up for a free trial of our full service at and follow us on X @Breakingviews and at www.breakingviews.com. All opinions expressed are those of the authors.
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Katrina Hamlin
Thomson Reuters
Katrina Hamlin is global production editor, based in Hong Kong. She is also a columnist, writing on topics including autos and electric vehicles, as well as the gambling industry in Macau and Asia. Before joining Reuters in 2012, Katrina was deputy managing editor of Shanghai Business Review magazine. She graduated from the University of Oxford with an MA in Classics, and earned a Masters of Journalism with distinction from the University of Hong Kong.
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