China- and US-based self-driving car startups Pony.ai and WeRide are ready for initial public offerings in the US, multiple media outlets have reported. The IPOs, which the firms have been eyeing for over two years, could happen as early as within the next two months.

Why it matters: Autonomous vehicle (AV) startups are generally facing pressure to lower their valuation targets as public stock markets have rapidly decelerated their interest in the space over the past few years.

  • A group of 14 self-driving tech companies have seen their combined valuation decline more than 80% since their public debuts, according to an analysis by Crunchbase in 2022. Chinese car tech firm iMotion and lidar maker Robosense have lost roughly 75% and 90% in stock market valuation in the six months since their listings in Hong Kong.
  • The potential listings of PonyAV.ai and WeRide, two of the highest-valued AV startups in China, will set the tone for many other companies trying to go public with their future-shaping technology, even as it takes longer than expected to become widely available.

Details: Fremont- and Guangzhou-based Pony.ai will go public as early as September, as some institutional investors have committed to purchasing shares in the looming IPO, financial media outlet Jiemian reported on Tuesday, without giving further details (in Chinese). WeRide is planning to sell its shares publicly in the US by the end of August, according to IFR, a Reuters publication.

  • WeRide, with its China headquarters in the southern city of Guangzhou, last August received approval for an overseas listing from the China Securities Regulatory Commission, which requires applicants to complete the share sale within 12 months of the date of filing. Pony.ai gained a similar regulatory greenlight in April, Bloomberg reported. Pony.ai and WeRide declined to comment when contacted by TechNode on Thursday.

Context: Pony.ai reportedly suspended a public listing plan in New York at a target valuation of $12 billion in mid-2021 due to regulatory uncertainties. The Toyota-backed company said early the next year that it was valued at $8.5 billion after closing its first round of Series D financing, TechCrunch reported.

  • WeRide, backed by the Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi Alliance, filed confidentially for a US IPO aimed at raising as much as $500 million, Bloomberg reported last March. The company was valued at about $5.1 billion in a November 2022 fundraising round, according to its official website.
  • Some other Chinese self-driving technology companies, including Horizon Robotics, Momenta, and Black Sesame, are rushing to sell shares publicly either in the US or Hong Kong as early investors are eager to earn money after incubating the companies for years, TechNode has learned.

Jill Shen is Shanghai-based technology reporter. She covers Chinese mobility, autonomous vehicles, and electric cars. Connect with her via e-mail: jill.shen@technode.com or Twitter: @jill_shen_sh