
LG Innotek to invest $50m in Aeva as part of strategic LiDAR partnership
Aeva, renowned for its frequency modulated continuous wave LiDAR technology, was the first company in the world to commercialize 4D LiDAR systems capable of long-range object sensing. Since beginning mass production in 2022, the firm has established itself as a key player in the self-driving ecosystem, with clients including global automakers such as Daimler Truck.
The first product LG Innotek will supply to Aeva is an advanced FMCW-based fixed LiDAR module capable of detecting objects up to 500 meters away.
Unlike traditional time-of-flight LiDAR, FMCW technology enables precise distance measurements and accurate velocity detection — a crucial advantage in complex traffic environments. The module is praised for its ultra-slim form factor and high-precision sensing capabilities.
LG Innotek's new module can be embedded behind a vehicle's front windshield, giving automakers greater freedom in vehicle design. For this integration, the company reduced the module's size by nearly half compared to existing models.
The LiDAR modules will be delivered to original equipment manufacturers as a complete solution, combined with Aeva's software platform.
'The ultimate goal of this partnership is for LG Innotek and Aeva to grow together as key players leading the next-generation LiDAR market through a long-term technology partnership that goes beyond the supply of products,' LG Innotek CEO Moon Hyuk-soo said.
As part of the partnership, the two firms also signed a joint development agreement to co-develop future FMCW LiDAR systems by the end of 2027. These solutions will extend beyond passenger vehicles to include robotics, robotaxis and industrial mobility applications.
According to industry projections, the global LiDAR market is expected to grow from $2.46 billion in 2023 to $15.4 billion by 2030, representing a compound annual growth rate of 36 percent.
To establish a strategic and long-term partnership with Aeva, the Korean electronics parts maker will acquire about 6 percent of Aeva's shares. Additionally, LG Innotek plans to invest up to $50 million exclusively in the LiDAR business.
'Our joint strategic collaboration underscores the growing recognition of FMCW as the future of sensing and perception technology," Aeva CEO Soroush Salehian said.
"Together with LG Innotek, we see a tremendous opportunity to bring Aeva's perception platform to a wide range of applications -- wherever machines need to perceive and understand their surroundings."
LG Innotek will further highlight the latest partnership at Aeva Day in New York on Thursday. Moon will deliver the keynote address, and both companies' chief technology officers will participate in a fireside chat to discuss the roadmap for and synergy potential of the collaboration.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
![[Editorial] Resetting the alliance](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fall-logos-bucket.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fkoreaherald.com.png&w=48&q=75)
Korea Herald
an hour ago
- Korea Herald
[Editorial] Resetting the alliance
Lee, Trump prepare for summit that may redefine Korea-US alliance President Lee Jae Myung's summit with US President Donald Trump this month is expected to mark a turning point in the Korea-US alliance. It will be their first in-person meeting since Trump returned to the White House in January, and it follows Seoul's hard-won tariff deal that secured trade terms on par with those for Japan. But economic parity is only part of the story. As security threats multiply and US foreign policy grows increasingly transactional, the summit presents an opportunity for South Korea to reanchor the alliance in predictability before global volatility intensifies. Lee, a progressive leader with no personal ties to Trump, is engaging a counterpart known for breaking diplomatic conventions and questioning traditional alliances. But Lee's emphasis on pragmatism — not flattery or defiance — is appropriate. His administration's goal is to reset the terms of engagement on clearer, firmer ground with a White House that demands more and guarantees less. At the top of the agenda is defense cost-sharing. During his first term, Trump demanded a fivefold increase in South Korea's contribution to the costs for hosting US troops on the peninsula. While a 2021 agreement put the issue on pause, concerns remain that Trump may revive the demand. Lee's team is preparing to resist sharp hikes and reframe the discussion around mutual benefits, not transactional arithmetic. South Korea's strategic importance cannot be reduced to dollars and cents. Its position between China and US-led alliances, combined with advanced defense and technological capabilities, makes it a regional linchpin. Hosting key military assets and conducting joint exercises strengthens collective readiness and reinforces the US presence in Northeast Asia. Nuclear deterrence is another critical issue. With North Korea expanding its arsenal and deepening ties with Russia, Lee is expected to push for renewed clarity on the US nuclear umbrella. A credible extended deterrence framework remains essential to South Korea's security, especially as Pyongyang shows no sign of restraint. Another priority is trilateral coordination with Japan. The Camp David process in August 2023, under the previous Joe Biden administration, strengthened Korea-US-Japan cooperation on missile tracking and early warning systems. Trump has yet to indicate whether he supports this framework or sees it merely as a holdover. Seoul will press for assurance that trilateral security cooperation is not undermined by a return to one-on-one bargaining. The recent tariff agreement offers a useful model. After months of low-profile negotiations, South Korea secured exemptions from certain US tariffs — a parity Japan already enjoyed. This outcome is viewed in Seoul as proof that diplomacy remains possible under Trump, if grounded in shared interests and quiet persistence. The challenge now is to apply that approach to defense, where uncertainty can be more damaging. Some critics argue that Trump's approach to alliances remains too mercurial. The broader question is how to 'modernize the alliance' — Washington's term for pressing allies to shoulder more of the defense burden and align with its strategy to keep China at bay. Whether Trump will engage Seoul in a serious, forward-looking conversation or pursue headline-driven concessions remains unclear. It is also uncertain whether the Trump administration, absorbed in domestic politics, fully appreciates the risks of strategic drift in East Asia, where tensions could escalate without warning. For Lee, the summit can be seen as a credibility test. His domestic critics are watching for signs of miscalculation or overreach. But if he returns with a firmer security road map, renewed deterrence commitments and no unpleasant surprises, he will have shown that South Korea can chart its course even amid unpredictable leadership in Washington. The talks are unlikely to smooth every wrinkle, yet they could mark a step toward a more grounded and resilient alliance — one shaped by the demands of a volatile era.


Korea Herald
10 hours ago
- Korea Herald
FM Cho says Lee-Trump summit unlikely to be delayed to next month
Foreign Minister Cho Hyun said Sunday last-minute coordination to set a date for a summit between President Lee Jae Myung and US President Donald Trump is under way, noting the envisioned meeting will not be delayed to next month. Last week, Trump announced that Lee will visit the White House in two weeks, as he announced Washington has agreed to lower "reciprocal" tariffs on South Korea to 15 percent from the proposed 25 percent in return for massive investments and market opening. Cho made the remark as he arrived in Seoul after back-to-back visits to the United States and Japan for his first talks with his counterparts since the launch of the Lee administration in June. Cho said his US visit, which included meetings with senior officials, including Secretary of State Marco Rubio, served as an occasion to reaffirm Washington's commitment to extended deterrence. "(We) reaffirmed the steadfast South Korea-US combined response posture, and extended deterrence and agreed to continue to cooperate going forward," Cho said. When asked about the Trump administration's push to "modernize" the alliance, Cho said the move involves taking various necessary measures, such as strengthening defense capabilities in the face of a stern international security environment, while brushing off concerns such push will affect Seoul's ties with China. Cho said in-depth talks over a possible role change of US troops in South Korea did not take place, saying the two sides agreed to discuss additional matters in working-level talks going forward. Addressing the possibility the US may seek to reset security issues following the tariff deal, Cho said he believes the allies could reach mutually beneficial agreements in the defense sector. (Yonhap)


Korea Herald
15 hours ago
- Korea Herald
Foreign money returns to Kospi, piling into Samsung
Analysts forecast Kospi's rally to take pause in August amid market correction Foreign investors net purchased shares of over 6 trillion won ($4.3 billion) on the benchmark Kospi in July, driven largely by a massive 3.5 trillion won buying spree on the country's leading chipmaker, Samsung Electronics. Offshore investors bought a net 6.28 trillion won worth of local stocks on the main bourse Kospi in July, according to the data from the bourse operator Korea Exchange. It was the largest amount since the 7.86 trillion won net buying in February 2024. Since turning to a net buying stance in May, foreign investors have been scooping up shares on the Kospi for three consecutive months. Samsung Electronics was the top pick, drawing 3.5 trillion won in net foreign purchases, accounting for 56 percent of the monthly total. Giving further buying momentum was news that the company would manufacture AI chips for Tesla under a multiyear $16.5 billion deal, stoking hopes of a rebound in its loss-making foundry business. Hanwha Ocean followed, buoyed by expectations surrounding the Korea-US trade deal, with offshore investors net purchasing shares worth 858 billion won. The shipbuilder under the defense-to-energy conglomerate Hanwha Group is expected to anchor the Korea-US shipbuilding initiative 'Make American Shipbuilding Great Again.' Shares of SK Square (457 billion won), Isu Petasys (329 billion won) and Hanwha Aerospace (249 billion won) trailed behind as the next most purchased stocks. Marking a contrast with the buying rally for Samsung Electronics, offshore investors offloaded 193.1 billion won worth of SK hynix shares last month, following a bearish forecast from global banking giant Goldman Sachs. Naver was the most sold stock by foreigners during the period, as they dumped 668.2 billion won worth of shares last month. Major net sold stocks included Doosan Enerbility (243.8 billion won), Samsung SDI (206.8 billion won), Kakao Pay (184.5 billion won) and KB Financial Group (159.8 billion won). Meanwhile, the Kospi sank to 3,119.41 on Friday, down 3.88 percent from the previous session, marking its sharpest single-day drop in two months. The stock market was dampened by the government's tax code revision plan and the uncertainty associated with the US tariff talks. On the day, foreign investors offloaded shares worth 656 billion won on the Kospi. 'Investor sentiment weakened as expectations for US rate cuts receded. Foreign investors posted net selling of around 1 trillion won in both the spot and futures markets amid a stronger dollar,' analyst Park Ki-hoon from Korea Investment & Securities explained. 'The market experienced a sharp correction as a series of expectations quickly unraveled amid heightened macro uncertainty both at home and abroad,' said Lee Kyung-min of Daishin Securities. Despite the Kospi's bullish run in recent months, analysts anticipate a period of elevated volatility in August as the index steps into a phase of valuation correction. 'The conclusion of the Korea-US tariff negotiations, diminished expectations for US rate cuts, and lowered hopes for tax reform are factors weighing on the stock market," said Na Jeong-hwan, an analyst at NH Investment & Securities, projecting the Kospi to trade between 3,000 and 3,300 points this week. 'With a lack of earnings momentum in the domestic market, a short-term correction appears necessary. Volatility is expected to increase in August,' said Kyobo Securities analyst Kim Joon-woo, suggesting the Kospi could inch down to as low as 2,900 points this month.