By Arunima Banerjee and Paul Lienert
GM's spinoff of Cruise drew a $2.25-billion investment from SoftBank Group, boosting GM's share price that day by 13 percent. SoftBank's 19.6-percent stake valued Cruise at $11.5 billion. GM paid an estimated $1 billion in 2016 to acquire the San Francisco-based self-driving startup.
"Ford has seemingly taken a step out of GM's playbook to try to unlock value" from its self-driving business, said RBC Capital Markets analyst Joseph Spak.
In mid-day trade, Ford shares were up 2.4 percent to $10.72.
Ford said it would invest $4 billion through 2023 in its newly formed Ford Autonomous Vehicles LLC, including the $1 billion it previously had earmarked for Argo AI, the Pittsburgh-based self-driving startup that Ford acquired in 2017.
The new unit, to be headed by Vice President Sherif Marakby and based at Ford's new Corktown campus in Detroit, will house self-driving vehicle research, engineering and systems integration, as well as business strategy and development for the automaker's future self-driving vehicle fleet.
Ford said it hoped to accelerate business opportunities with the creation of the new unit, which it said is "structured to take on third-party investment."
GM Cruise and Alphabet Inc's Waymo are often described as leading the pack of technology and auto companies competing to create self-driving cars and integrate them into ride services fleets.
Alphabet plans to launch a self-driving ride service later this year, while GM Cruise has targeted the introduction of a similar service in 2019. Ford has said it expects to put self-driving vehicles into commercial service by 2021.
(Reporting by Arunima Banerjee in Bengaluru and Paul Lienert in Detroit; Additional reporting by David Shepardson in Washington; Editing by Supriya Kurane and Frances Kerry)
(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)