WeRide's Robotaxi Strategy Drives Revenue Surge and Shrinking Losses

MarketDash Editorial Team
10 days ago
The autonomous vehicle company more than doubled quarterly revenue as its driverless taxi fleet expands globally, with breakthrough permits in Abu Dhabi and Switzerland helping push gross margins to an impressive 32.9%.

Here's the thing about the robotaxi business: everyone's racing to scale up their fleets and plant flags in new cities, but most companies are burning cash faster than their cars can drive. WeRide Inc. (WRD) just showed that the path to profitability might actually exist if you can crack the right markets with the right regulatory approvals.

The driverless car company delivered its first results since listing in Hong Kong earlier this month, and the numbers tell a compelling story. Third-quarter revenues jumped 144% to 171 million yuan ($24 million) compared to the same period last year. That's the biggest quarterly revenue increase in the company's history, and it's being driven by something specific: robotaxi revenues absolutely exploded, rocketing up 761% to 35.3 million yuan. Those robotaxi revenues went from representing just 5.8% of total turnover to 20.7% in a single year.

The Margin Story Gets Interesting

Revenue growth is nice, but here's where things get really interesting. WeRide's gross margin jumped 26.4 percentage points to reach 32.9%. That's not just good for an autonomous vehicle company—it's an industry standout number. For context, arch competitor Pony.ai posted a gross margin of just 18.4% in the same quarter, despite improving by 9.2 percentage points.

The company's net loss for the three months ending in September shrank by almost a third to 307 million yuan from 1.04 billion yuan a year earlier. The adjusted loss edged up slightly to 276 million yuan from 240 million yuan, but narrowing losses for three straight quarters is genuinely uncommon for a company investing heavily in cutting-edge driverless technology.

For the first nine months of the year, WeRide's revenue rose 68.2% to 371 million yuan, while net losses shrank to just under 1.10 billion yuan from 1.92 billion yuan in the same period of 2024.

Let's be clear: both WeRide and Pony.ai are still generating losses that far exceed their revenue. This is an industry burning through cash in a battle for market share. But WeRide's leap in gross margin could put it in pole position to actually achieve profitability down the road, which would be quite the accomplishment.

The Abu Dhabi Breakthrough

So what's driving these margin improvements? It comes down to WeRide's push into multiple markets for fully driverless, commercially viable operations, rather than just throwing more subsidized cars on the road and hoping for the best.

The big breakthrough came in Abu Dhabi, where WeRide gained landmark approval for fully driverless taxis. This was the first city-level permit for autonomous robotaxis issued outside the United States, and it came through what's regarded as a stringent regulatory process. Here's why it matters: WeRide's robotaxis are allowed to operate for extended hours and across districts without in-vehicle safety officers. No safety officer means lower operating costs, and the fleet's finances in Abu Dhabi have actually broken even for the first time.

WeRide now operates more than 150 autonomous vehicles in the Middle East and is aiming to expand its regional fleet into the tens of thousands by 2030. In Abu Dhabi specifically, the company's taxis cover roughly 50% of the city's urban core. That commercial permit is directly driving the cost efficiencies that are boosting gross margin.

Cracking the Swiss Market

Progress hasn't been limited to the Middle East. In November, WeRide secured a robotaxi permit to operate in the Swiss Canton of Zurich, with services expected to launch in 2026. Switzerland has an exacting approval system, so getting regulatory clearance there offers a credible endorsement in the eyes of the global market. It's like getting a Good Housekeeping seal, but for autonomous vehicles navigating narrow European streets.

As of October, WeRide operated more than 1,600 autonomous vehicles overall, including nearly 750 robotaxis. With the Swiss permit, its vehicles are now licensed to operate in eight countries. That's meaningful geographic diversification for a relatively young company.

Beyond Robotaxis

WeRide is also making moves beyond the pure robotaxi play. The company is doubling down on technology development, earmarking proceeds from its Hong Kong listing for this purpose. It has already partnered with Bosch to develop an advanced driver-assistance system that's been adopted by major Chinese automakers and is approaching mass production. The one-stage end-to-end L2+ system is an enhanced form of semi-automation where the vehicle can initiate certain actions and maneuvers on its own.

This month, WeRide announced it had started manufacturing an end-to-end L2+ solution that incorporates more advanced L4 technologies. This marks the first time the company has applied this architecture beyond robotaxis, opening a potential pathway for advanced self-driving features to flow into consumer passenger models. If WeRide can sell its technology to traditional automakers at scale, that's a whole different revenue stream that doesn't require operating fleets of taxis.

Market Reception

On the first trading day after the earnings release, WeRide's U.S.-listed shares jumped 14.7% to close at $8.26, though they remain down about 40% year to date. The Hong Kong-listed shares rose a more moderate 1.75% to HK$20.88, still about 16.4% below the listing price.

Despite its overseas progress and improving margins, WeRide trades at a price-to-sales ratio of roughly 35.9 times using Hong Kong metrics. That's actually lower than Pony.ai's 46.8 times multiple, which is interesting given WeRide's superior margin profile.

Investors remain understandably sensitive to risks in the self-driving sector. There's regulatory uncertainty, technological hurdles, and the basic question of when these companies will actually turn a profit. But WeRide has shown something important: it can turn a localized profit in some jurisdictions. If the company can demonstrate stable earnings from high-barrier markets like Abu Dhabi and Switzerland, and if sales of its L2+ product line take off, the valuation could perk up considerably.

The robotaxi race is far from over, but WeRide just posted some results that suggest the finish line might actually be visible on the horizon.

WeRide's Robotaxi Strategy Drives Revenue Surge and Shrinking Losses

MarketDash Editorial Team
10 days ago
The autonomous vehicle company more than doubled quarterly revenue as its driverless taxi fleet expands globally, with breakthrough permits in Abu Dhabi and Switzerland helping push gross margins to an impressive 32.9%.

Here's the thing about the robotaxi business: everyone's racing to scale up their fleets and plant flags in new cities, but most companies are burning cash faster than their cars can drive. WeRide Inc. (WRD) just showed that the path to profitability might actually exist if you can crack the right markets with the right regulatory approvals.

The driverless car company delivered its first results since listing in Hong Kong earlier this month, and the numbers tell a compelling story. Third-quarter revenues jumped 144% to 171 million yuan ($24 million) compared to the same period last year. That's the biggest quarterly revenue increase in the company's history, and it's being driven by something specific: robotaxi revenues absolutely exploded, rocketing up 761% to 35.3 million yuan. Those robotaxi revenues went from representing just 5.8% of total turnover to 20.7% in a single year.

The Margin Story Gets Interesting

Revenue growth is nice, but here's where things get really interesting. WeRide's gross margin jumped 26.4 percentage points to reach 32.9%. That's not just good for an autonomous vehicle company—it's an industry standout number. For context, arch competitor Pony.ai posted a gross margin of just 18.4% in the same quarter, despite improving by 9.2 percentage points.

The company's net loss for the three months ending in September shrank by almost a third to 307 million yuan from 1.04 billion yuan a year earlier. The adjusted loss edged up slightly to 276 million yuan from 240 million yuan, but narrowing losses for three straight quarters is genuinely uncommon for a company investing heavily in cutting-edge driverless technology.

For the first nine months of the year, WeRide's revenue rose 68.2% to 371 million yuan, while net losses shrank to just under 1.10 billion yuan from 1.92 billion yuan in the same period of 2024.

Let's be clear: both WeRide and Pony.ai are still generating losses that far exceed their revenue. This is an industry burning through cash in a battle for market share. But WeRide's leap in gross margin could put it in pole position to actually achieve profitability down the road, which would be quite the accomplishment.

The Abu Dhabi Breakthrough

So what's driving these margin improvements? It comes down to WeRide's push into multiple markets for fully driverless, commercially viable operations, rather than just throwing more subsidized cars on the road and hoping for the best.

The big breakthrough came in Abu Dhabi, where WeRide gained landmark approval for fully driverless taxis. This was the first city-level permit for autonomous robotaxis issued outside the United States, and it came through what's regarded as a stringent regulatory process. Here's why it matters: WeRide's robotaxis are allowed to operate for extended hours and across districts without in-vehicle safety officers. No safety officer means lower operating costs, and the fleet's finances in Abu Dhabi have actually broken even for the first time.

WeRide now operates more than 150 autonomous vehicles in the Middle East and is aiming to expand its regional fleet into the tens of thousands by 2030. In Abu Dhabi specifically, the company's taxis cover roughly 50% of the city's urban core. That commercial permit is directly driving the cost efficiencies that are boosting gross margin.

Cracking the Swiss Market

Progress hasn't been limited to the Middle East. In November, WeRide secured a robotaxi permit to operate in the Swiss Canton of Zurich, with services expected to launch in 2026. Switzerland has an exacting approval system, so getting regulatory clearance there offers a credible endorsement in the eyes of the global market. It's like getting a Good Housekeeping seal, but for autonomous vehicles navigating narrow European streets.

As of October, WeRide operated more than 1,600 autonomous vehicles overall, including nearly 750 robotaxis. With the Swiss permit, its vehicles are now licensed to operate in eight countries. That's meaningful geographic diversification for a relatively young company.

Beyond Robotaxis

WeRide is also making moves beyond the pure robotaxi play. The company is doubling down on technology development, earmarking proceeds from its Hong Kong listing for this purpose. It has already partnered with Bosch to develop an advanced driver-assistance system that's been adopted by major Chinese automakers and is approaching mass production. The one-stage end-to-end L2+ system is an enhanced form of semi-automation where the vehicle can initiate certain actions and maneuvers on its own.

This month, WeRide announced it had started manufacturing an end-to-end L2+ solution that incorporates more advanced L4 technologies. This marks the first time the company has applied this architecture beyond robotaxis, opening a potential pathway for advanced self-driving features to flow into consumer passenger models. If WeRide can sell its technology to traditional automakers at scale, that's a whole different revenue stream that doesn't require operating fleets of taxis.

Market Reception

On the first trading day after the earnings release, WeRide's U.S.-listed shares jumped 14.7% to close at $8.26, though they remain down about 40% year to date. The Hong Kong-listed shares rose a more moderate 1.75% to HK$20.88, still about 16.4% below the listing price.

Despite its overseas progress and improving margins, WeRide trades at a price-to-sales ratio of roughly 35.9 times using Hong Kong metrics. That's actually lower than Pony.ai's 46.8 times multiple, which is interesting given WeRide's superior margin profile.

Investors remain understandably sensitive to risks in the self-driving sector. There's regulatory uncertainty, technological hurdles, and the basic question of when these companies will actually turn a profit. But WeRide has shown something important: it can turn a localized profit in some jurisdictions. If the company can demonstrate stable earnings from high-barrier markets like Abu Dhabi and Switzerland, and if sales of its L2+ product line take off, the valuation could perk up considerably.

The robotaxi race is far from over, but WeRide just posted some results that suggest the finish line might actually be visible on the horizon.