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Great deal in the history of Israel's high-tech: Intel Acquires Mobileye $ 15 billion

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Great deal in the history of Israel's high-tech: Intel Acquires Mobileye $ 15 billion
The company develops quickly Hozvim autonomous driving systems sold granting global chip. Companies recently announced a collaboration in the field of autonomous vehicle with BMW Company

Meir Orbach 11: 5013.03.17
Tags: Intel Mobileye newly established high-tech
US chip giant Intel is about to announce today (Monday) announced the acquisition of Mobileye (47.270.83%) in exchange for approximately $ 15 billion. The parties are still not responding to the report, but according to estimates, is expected to be published in an official announcement today.
Read more Calcalist:
Israel's Mobileye 1,867 distributed virtual reality goggles - and broke a Guinness World Record
Expert scraping against Mobileye, "estimates its share price equal to 25% Less"
Gas name: Mobileye surpassed analysts' forecasts for the fourth quarter

Companies recently announced a collaboration in the field of autonomous vehicle together with the company from a hook.
Main Mobileye Amnon Ziv Aviram and amusement pants the employees to inform them about the huge transaction. Mobileye's share of this pre jumps at New York trading more than 20%.

Amnon amusement, amusement Amnon Mobileye co-founder, co-founder Mobileye Photo: Nimrod Glickman
Mobileye recorded a month ago another milestone towards establishing the autonomous vehicle industry when it announced that it had signed a cooperation agreement with Volkswagen to implement the REM system - used to monitor the location and hiking paths to make autonomous driving maps
http://www.calcalist.co.il/internet/articles/0,7340,L-3709467,00.html
trnslated by google
 
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Intel buys Mobileye in $15.3B deal, moves its automotive unit to Israel
Posted 5 hours ago by Ingrid Lunden (@ingridlunden)
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First they partnered, and now comes the acquisition: the computing giant Intel has confirmed that it is acquiring Mobileye, a leader in computer vision for autonomous driving technology, for $15.3 billion — the biggest-ever acquisition of an Israeli tech company.

Specifically, “Under the terms of the agreement, a subsidiary of Intel will commence a tender offer to acquire all of the issued and outstanding ordinary shares of Mobileye for $63.54 per share in cash, representing a fully-diluted equity value of approximately $15.3 billion and an enterprise value of $14.7 billion,” the company noted in a statement. The deal is expected to close in about nine months, Intel said.

Mobileye today covers a range of technology and services including sensor fusion, mapping, front- and rear-facing camera tech, and beginning in 2018, crowdsourcing data for high definition maps, as well as driving policy intelligence underlying driving decisions. This deal will bring under Intel’s umbrella not only a much bigger range of the different pieces that go into autonomous driving systems, but also a number of relationships with automakers. In the call today, Mobileye’s CTO and co-founder Amnon Shashua said the company is working with 27 car manufacturers, including 10 production programs with Audi, BMW and others going into 2016.

“This acquisition is a great step forward for our shareholders, the automotive industry and consumers,” said Brian Krzanich, Intel CEO, in a statement. “Intel provides critical foundational technologies for autonomous driving including plotting the car’s path and making real-time driving decisions. Mobileye brings the industry’s best automotive-grade computer vision and strong momentum with automakers and suppliers. Together, we can accelerate the future of autonomous driving with improved performance in a cloud-to-car solution at a lower cost for automakers.”

“We expect the growth towards autonomous driving to be transformative. It will provide consumers with safer, more flexible, and less costly transportation options, and provide incremental business model opportunities for our automaker customers,” Ziv Aviram, Mobileye Co-Founder, President and CEO, added. “By pooling together our infrastructure and resources, we can enhance and accelerate our combined know-how in the areas of mapping, virtual driving, simulators, development tool chains, hardware, data centers and high-performance computing platforms. Together, we will provide an attractive value proposition for the automotive industry.”

Confirming our earlier report, Intel said that Mobileye’s CTO and co-founder, Prof. Amnon Shashua, will lead Intel’s autonomous driving division, which will be based in Israel. Doug Davis, Intel’s SVP, will oversee how Mobileye and Intel work together across the whole company and will report to Shashua.

Other notable exits that have also tapped into Israel’s expertise in computer vision and machine learning have included Google buying mapping startup Waze for $1.1 billion and Apple buying 3D sensor specialist PrimeSense for reportedly around $300 million.

The negotiations about what stays where for Mobileye and Intel are reminiscent of one of the other big M&A deals in Israel’s tech history, concerning Waze. Originally, Waze was being courted by Facebook, although there were disagreements over where Waze’s staff would be centered: engineering wanted to stay in Israel while Facebook was keen to get the to Facebook’s HQ in Menlo Park. Ultimately that delay led to Google swooping in, agreeing to Waze’s terms, and closing the deal.

Intel has been working officially with Mobileye since last year. Earlier this year, with BMW, the two started to test 40 self-driving cars equipped with the two companies’ technology. Mobileye was also an early partner of Tesla’s for its autonomous technology, although that relationship is ending amid some controversial undertones about safety measures at the carmaker. Other investments that Intel has made in the space of cars include takin a stake in Here (which will feed into the mapping initiatives at Mobileye); acquiring Itseez and Yogitech for safety and navigation functionalities in autonomous cars; and making a commitment of at least $250 million to the space (which sounds so tiny considering today’s price tag); keeping a strong presence at auto shows, and in November launching a dedicated autonomous driving group, which is headed up by Doug Davis, who will now report to Mobileye’s CTO.

Mobileye went public on the Nasdaq in 2014 and currently has a market cap of about $10.5 billion. It’s trading up now more than 33 percent ahead of the market opening on the news. As a point of context, the company had moved only 0.83% on Friday’s trades.

Intel had been a leader in processors at the peak of the PC era, although it has competed hard (and often lost) as smartphones overtook the larger devices as consumers’ computers of choice.

Moving deeper into self-driving technology is part of Intel’s bigger strategy to build up its position in emerging areas of computing. Other verticals that Intel has focused on include connected “objects” (IoT) and virtual and augmented reality. It has been following through on this strategy with acquisitions as well as organic growth.

“The combination is expected to accelerate innovation for the automotive industry and position Intel as a leading technology provider in the fast-growing market for highly and fully autonomous vehicles,” the company continued. “Intel estimates the vehicle systems, data and services market opportunity to be up to $70 billion by 2030. The transaction extends Intel’s strategy to invest in data-intensive market opportunities that build on the company’s strengths in computing and connectivity from the cloud, through the network, to the device.”

Intel has disclosed several other acquisitions in Israel to fill out that strategy, including buying a personal assistant platform from Ginger Software; Omek Interactive for gesture-based technologies; and Replay Technologies for 3D video.

Intel is not the only company that is investing in and acquiring startups in the area of computer vision to raise its game in the area of autonomous cars.

Just earlier today, Valeo, the automotive parts giant, announced that it had acquired gestigon, a start‑up out of Germany that develops in-car 3D image processing software — used both to communicate to the driver as well as pick up signals from within the car and from the driver to communicate to a self-driving (or partially self-driving) car what to do next.

Terms of the deal, which includes staff as well as IP, were not disclosed. Valeo has been a regular investor in autonomous driving tech, taking a stake, for example, in French autonomous shuttle company Navya and getting a license in California to test self-driving cars. This latest acquisition shows that it remains serious about doing more in this area.

We’ll be dialling into the companies’ call with investors in about 30 minutes and will update this story with more then.
https://techcrunch.com/2017/03/13/r...for-up-to-16b-to-expand-in-self-driving-tech/
 
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BYSHARON UDASIN

MARCH 13, 2017 12:02
Mobileye is working with many of the world’s biggest auto manufacturers to pave the way for self-driving cars and trucks.

ShowImage.ashx

Mobileye founders Prof. Amnon Shashua (left) and Ziv Aviram. (photo credit:Courtesy)

In the biggest deal ever to hit Israel's hi-tech industry, US chip giant Intel will be buying Jerusalem's autonomous driving company Mobileye for about $15 billion.

The firms announced a definitive agreement on Monday for the Santa Clara, California-based Intel Corporation to acquire Mobileye, a global leader in the development of computer visions and machine learning, data analysis, localization and mapping for advanced driver assistance systems and autonomous driving.

According to the agreement, a subsidiary of Intel will launch a tender to acquire all of the outstanding ordinary shares of Mobileye for $63.54 per share in cash, amounting to an equity value of about $15.3b. and an enterprise value of $14.7b.

“This acquisition is a great step forward for our shareholders, the automotive industry and consumers,” said Brian Krzanich, Intel CEO. “Intel provides critical foundational technologies for autonomous driving including plotting the car’s path and making real-time driving decisions. Mobileye brings the industry’s best automotive-grade computer vision and strong momentum with automakers and suppliers. Together, we can accelerate the future of autonomous driving with improved performance in a cloud-to-car solution at a lower cost for automakers.”

By combining Intel's high-performance computing and connectivity expertise with Mobileye's computer vision technologies, the chip giant is hoping to position itself as a leading technology provider for highly and fully autonomous vehicles, according to a joint statement from the companies. Intel estimated that vehicle systems, data and services market opportunity to be up to $70b. by 2030.

Autonomous Car Driving - Mobileye


CEO Ziv Aviram founded Mobileye in 1999 with Prof. Amnon Shashua of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Their company is best known for inventing a technology to alert drivers to obstacles. Using that proprietary obstacle-sensing sensor system to gather millions of kilometers of driving data, Mobileye is working with many of the world’s biggest auto manufacturers to pave the way for self-driving cars and trucks.

In August 2014, the company went public on the New York Stock Exchange, raising $890 million in the largest Israeli IPO in the United States. With the exception of Toyota and Mercedes, Aviram said Mobileye is working with all the big names in car manufacturing.

“We still like to call ourselves a start-up, but we are a global, international company, operating and doing R&D in Israel, supplying a huge industry, and growing,” he told The Jerusalem Post last year.

Aviram laid out his road map for bringing fully autonomous cars onto city streets and highways.

“Autonomous cars are not a dream anymore. It’s not a matter of if. It’s matter of when,” he said.

The first of three phases, he said, was the advent of semi-autonomous driving, which is already available in some cars today, including Tesla’s Model S. Drivers can push an “auto-pilot” button when they’re on the highway, and the car will remain in its lane and avoid other vehicles. But the driver must still remain attentive, and the technology is not suited for city driving.

By 2018, the next phase, called automated driving, will be available. That system, which will require three cameras, will allow drivers to focus on other things during highway driving.

By 2021, Aviram said, he anticipates fully autonomous cars will hit the road.

Last year at the Jerusalem Post Annual Conference in New York, Mobileye was awarded with the 2016 innovation prize.

Niv Elis contributed to this report.

http://www.jpost.com/Business-and-I...n-in-biggest-Israeli-hi-tech-deal-ever-484044
 
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Thats why i use AMD... I knew intel is some Jewih conspiracy :lol:
 
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You do realize that mine was a troll comment which wasn't to be replied ;)

Btw , many moons ago i did land in Haifa and found it full of Indians. Almost all engineers and tech staff hired by Israeli companies. Not much related to the thread but just remembered.
maybe they was from some
delegation no import engeenirs in israel
 
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From what little I know. it looks like one loser buying another loser. ie INTEL buying Mobileye.
INTEL missed the bus on GPU's. NVIDIA kicking their *** with a huge head start.

Tesla no longer using Mobileye, completely moved to NVIDIA.

I used both "autopilot" and "autosteer" in Tesla. It is a thing of beauty in Traffic.
Telsa dumped Mobileye and is now dating NVIDIA - the leader in AI & GPUs


https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...eye-tried-to-block-its-auto-vision-capability
 
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