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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

General Motors invests in Lyft, forms partnership

Dee-Ann Durbin Associated Press

DETROIT – The automotive industry is placing its biggest bet yet that using a device to hail a ride – with or without a driver – is the future of transportation.

General Motors Co. said Monday it is investing $500 million in ride-hailing company Lyft Inc. and forming an unprecedented partnership that could eventually lead to on-demand, self-driving cars. It’s the largest investment yet by a traditional automaker in a new mobility company, and is an acknowledgment by GM that the transportation landscape is changing fast.

“We see the world of mobility changing more in the next five years than it has in the last 50,” GM President Dan Ammann told the Associated Press.

GM made the investment as part of a $1 billion round of fundraising by Lyft.

Together, the companies plan to open a network of U.S. hubs where Lyft drivers can rent GM vehicles at discounted rates. That could expand Lyft’s business by giving people who don’t own cars a way to drive and earn money through Lyft. It also gives GM a leg up on competitors like Daimler AG and Ford Motor Co., who are developing their own ride-sharing services. And it would put more young drivers behind the wheel of a Chevrolet, Buick, GMC or Cadillac.

Longer term, GM and Lyft will work together to develop a fleet of autonomous vehicles that city dwellers could summon using Lyft’s mobile app. Partnering with GM could give Lyft a boost over its archrival, Uber Technologies Inc., which is working on its own driverless cars.

Karl Brauer, an industry analyst with Kelley Blue Book, expects to see automakers and tech companies form more partnerships over the next few months.

“Each one has an area of specialization to make both of them stronger,” he said.

GM gets a seat on Lyft’s board and access to the three-year-old company’s software, which matches riders with drivers and automates payments. The partnership also better positions the automaker for a future in which customers don’t buy cars every five or six years but share rides or hail drivers when they need to get somewhere.

San Francisco-based Lyft gets the expertise of a 108-year-old automaker with decades of experience in making connected and autonomous vehicles.