Tesla to roll out robotaxis in overdue step towards Musk dream
Tesla is rolling out its first robotaxis on the streets of Austin after almost a decade of hype from Elon Musk, kicking off a precarious new era for the carmaker.
The launch of a driverless taxi service on Sunday (Jun 22) is set to begin modestly, with a handful of vehicles in limited areas of the city. Tesla hand-picked initial riders who are expected to offer feedback on the experience, so the general public will still have to wait.
The low-key rollout has nonetheless been highly anticipated by investors, who are counting on the new business line to revive a company battered by flagging sales and a consumer backlash against Musk. The Tesla chief executive officer is betting the company's future on autonomous driving, artificial intelligence and humanoid robots – buzzy but still largely unproven markets.
'This is the first true test,' Gene Munster, managing partner of Deepwater Asset Management, said in an interview. 'Anything that happens will be amplified, especially the negative. There's a lot at stake.'
Tesla has ramped up testing recently in the Texas state capital, where Model Y SUVs with manufacturer plates have been spotted regularly in the south and south-east portions of the city. Musk recently promoted a video on social media of one of its vehicles driving in Austin with nobody behind the wheel.
Some details of the launch emerged in recent days after several social-media users – known for promoting Tesla – revealed that they were selected for early access to a new robotaxi app and the ride-hailing service.
BT in your inbox
Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
Sign Up
Sign Up
According to the use parameters posted by one account, robotaxis will be available between 6 am and midnight every day within unspecified geofenced areas of the city, not including the airport. The service may be limited or unavailable in foul weather. A 'safety monitor' will be sitting in the front passenger seat for rides during the early access period.
Musk has said Tesla would initially roll out 10 to 20 vehicles before expanding to a thousand within a few months, and later introducing a purpose-built Cybercab with no pedals or steering wheel.
The CEO has a history of overpromising in the area of autonomy. After hinting at the possibility of an autonomous-car service in a business plan in 2016, he said three years later that Tesla customers would be able to utilise their vehicles as robotaxis by 2020.
Tesla has long offered a system called Full Self Driving that, despite the name, requires continual driver supervision and doesn't make vehicles autonomous. The company has said it will operate its robotaxi network using an 'unsupervised' version of the software that will not require a human driver to monitor.
Safety is a crucial factor in driverless car operations. Incidents that injure or kill people can bring regulatory crackdowns and negative attention to companies. Cruise, the now-defunct autonomy business of General Motors, grounded its fleet in late 2023 and had its operating licence suspended in California following an accident that injured a pedestrian.
Uber Technologies ceased testing self-driving vehicles after one of its SUVs struck and killed a pedestrian in Arizona in 2018. Less than three years later, the company agreed to sell its self-driving business.
Austin has become a hot spot for autonomous vehicle operations. Waymo, which is owned by Google parent Alphabet, is scaling up in the city through a partnership with Uber. Amazon.com's Zoox is also testing there.
In Texas, Tesla faces few restrictions to operate autonomous vehicles. Driverless vehicles are required to be equipped with cameras, have insurance and follow traffic rules. A rideshare licence in not currently required.
At the federal level, authorities are taking steps to ease the deployment of autonomous vehicles without driver controls such as steering wheels or pedals. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said this month that it will streamline the process to get an exemption for such vehicles, which under current policy has resulted in lengthy processing times that can last years. BLOOMBERG
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Business Times
2 hours ago
- Business Times
StashAway's Singapore operations turn Ebitda positive in FY2024
[SINGAPORE] Wealth platform StashAway's Singapore market has turned earnings before tax, interest, depreciation and amortisation (Ebitda) positive in FY2024 ending Dec 31. On a group level across Singapore, Malaysia, Dubai, Hong Kong and Thailand, Ebitda loss narrowed to S$5.3 million for 2024 from S$8 million in 2023. Revenue for 2024 jumped 36 per cent to S$14.8 million, from S$10.9 million in 2023. Michele Ferrario, co-founder and chief executive officer of StashAway, said: 'This growth has been driven by mostly current customers continuing to invest with us.' StashAway's main market – Singapore – was the key driver for revenue growth, jumping 44.9 per cent to S$11.3 million in 2024 from S$7.8 million in 2023. Costs for Singapore's operations dipped slightly to S$15.1 million in 2024 from S$15.7 million in 2023. In particular, marketing expenses only inched up to S$843,338 in 2024 in Singapore, compared to S$785,970 in 2023, underscoring that growth was from existing customers rather than new customers. At the group level, marketing costs edged up from S$1.1 million in 2023 to S$1.5 million in 2024. This has resulted in StashAway's Singapore operations being Ebitda positive with S$1.4 million in 2024, from a loss of S$1.8 million in 2023. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up What has been key to getting existing customers to invest more is the new products introduced over the last three years, from Simple Guaranteed, which finds the best fixed deposit rate to Income Investing, a fixed income product. The alternatives offerings such as private credit, private equity, venture capital, angel investing and private infrastructure have also aided in driving up customers' assets under management. Ferrario said that the combination has helped clients invest 'more of their wealth' with the company. While the new alternatives offerings were solely catered for high-net-worth individuals (HNWI), these offerings did not see as much growth from HNWIs as the core portfolio offerings. Still, the launch of these alternatives did attract more HNWIs to invest more with StashAway, he added. Turning Ebitda positive in Singapore shows that the company can grow revenue without significantly growing costs. For a 36 per cent jump in 2024 revenue, transaction and operating costs grew 25 per cent to S$2 millon in 2024 from S$1.6 million in 2023. The CEO said: 'In our case we also have a tech-first approach, so there is the leverage of classic asset management business with the operational leverage of a technology firm.' StashAway was always on the path of turning Ebitda positive in Singapore, being part of the budget of last year, he said. The unit economics work, and coupled with discipline on managing the cost base, it has become just a question of growth. Currently, there is no hard timeline to reach profitability, as Ferrario wants StashAway to be nimble in meeting changes. When the company reaches profitability will depend on its decisions on growth and how much it spends to grow. As the company invests in the smaller markets, the journey to profitability has been slower, he said. Inorganic growth is also not being ruled out, with the wealth platform open to opportunities. There were previous opportunities in the past but StashAway ultimately decided not to follow through. Any acquisition will need to make strategic and financial sense, especially as a way to get to where the company wants to be faster.

Straits Times
2 hours ago
- Straits Times
Protesters demand debt cancellation, climate action ahead of UN summit
People carry a banner that reads ''Pay now! Cancel the debt! Change the system!'' as they take part in a march demanding a UN-led framework for sovereign debt resolution, on the eve of the 4th International Conference on Financing for Development, in Seville, Spain, June 29, 2025. REUTERS/Claudia Greco People take part in a march demanding a UN-led framework for sovereign debt resolution, on the eve of the 4th International Conference on Financing for Development, in Seville, Spain, June 29, 2025. REUTERS/Claudia Greco People take part in a march demanding a UN-led framework for sovereign debt resolution, on the eve of the 4th International Conference on Financing for Development, in Seville, Spain, June 29, 2025. REUTERS/Claudia Greco People take part in a march demanding a UN-led framework for sovereign debt resolution, on the eve of the 4th International Conference on Financing for Development, in Seville, Spain, June 29, 2025. REUTERS/Claudia Greco People take part in a march demanding a UN-led framework for sovereign debt resolution, on the eve of the 4th International Conference on Financing for Development, in Seville, Spain, June 29, 2025. REUTERS/Claudia Greco SEVILLE, Spain - Activists marched in blistering heat through southern Spain's Seville on Sunday, calling for debt cancellation, climate justice and taxing the super rich on the eve of a UN summit on financing development that critics say lacks ambition and scope. The four-day meeting - held once every decade - promises to take on poverty, disease and climate change by mapping out the global framework for development. But the United States' decision to pull out and wealthy countries' shrinking appetite for foreign aid have dampened hopes that the summit will bring about significant change. Greenpeace members carried a float depicting billionaire Elon Musk as a baby wielding a chainsaw, seated atop a terrestrial globe. Others held up banners reading "Make Human Rights Great Again", "Tax justice now" or "Make polluters pay". Beauty Narteh of Ghana's Anti-Corruption Coalition said her group wanted a fairer tax system and "dignity, not handouts". Sokhna Ndiaye, of the Africa Development Interchange Network, called on the public and private sectors to be "less selfish and show more solidarity" with developing countries. Hours earlier, however, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said that "the very fact that this conference is happening while conflict is raging across the globe is a reason to be hopeful". Speaking at an event by non-profit Global Citizen, Sanchez reiterated Madrid's commitment to reach 0.7% of GDP in development aid and urged other countries to do the same. Jason Braganza, executive director of pan-African advocacy group AFRODAD who took part in the year-long negotiation on the conference's final outcome document, said countries including the U.S., the European Union and Britain had obstructed efforts to organise a UN convention on sovereign debt. "It's a shame these countries have opted to protect their own interests and those of creditors over lives that are being lost," he added. REUTERS Find out more about climate change and how it could affect you on the ST microsite here.
Business Times
3 hours ago
- Business Times
Trump says ‘getting along well' with China, downplays hostile acts
[WASHINGTON] President Donald Trump on Sunday dismissed the importance of aggressive actions linked to Beijing including recent arrests of two Chinese nationals accused of smuggling a dangerous pathogen into the United States, saying 'that's the way the world works.' Trump told Fox News that Washington behaves in a similar way. 'You don't think we do that to them? We do, we do a lot of things,' he said on the Sunday Morning Futures with Maria Bartiromo show. 'That's the way the world works. It's a nasty world.' Trump was responding to a question about how he viewed Chinese intellectual property theft, hacking of the US telecoms system and controversy around the Covid-19 pandemic. He likewise dismissed concerns over a case in which two Chinese nationals were accused last month of smuggling in a toxic fungus. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up Yunqing Jian, 33, and Zunyong Liu, 34, are charged with conspiracy, smuggling, false statements, and visa fraud. The US Justice Department said the pair conspired to smuggle into the United States a fungus called Fusarium graminearum that causes 'head blight,' a disease of wheat, barley, maize and rice. Trump downplayed this saying, 'you don't know where that came from, though. I mean, did that come from the country, or is that three wackos that happened to carry something?' Referring to the ongoing US-China trade war, Trump appeared to signal he was satisfied, saying 'We're getting along well with China.' He added: 'I think getting along with China is a very good thing, but they are paying substantial tariffs.' This past week, the White House signalled trade progress with China with an official saying both sides have reached an understanding on issues including expediting rare earth shipments to the United States. After talks in Geneva in May, Washington and Beijing agreed to temporarily lower steep tit-for-tat tariffs on each other's products. AFP