The world of autonomous driving took a big blow on Wednesday with the sudden news that Argo AI will shut down. The high-profile startup had deep pockets courtesy of large investments from Ford and then Volkswagen Group, but both automakers are pulling back those resources to apply them to other problems like advanced driver assistance systems.
Argo was founded in 2016 and emerged into public view the following year with the news that Ford was investing a billion dollars in the startup over five years. At the time, the automaker was planning to launch a commercial autonomous ride-hailing business in 2021—a date that it obviously missed and an ambition it no longer holds.
In 2019, VW Group joined the party, adding another billion dollars in cash and $1.6 billion in the form of Audi's autonomous driving spinoff. The company also agreed to buy half of Ford's stake over three years.
What makes the news shocking is that Argo appeared to be one of the better-positioned autonomous vehicle startups, alongside Alphabet's Waymo and General Motors-backed Cruise. In 2021, Lyft partnered with Argo after selling its own autonomous driving research group to Toyota and has deployed Argo-powered autonomous Lyfts in Miami (beginning in December 2021) and Austin (in late September 2022).

In September 2021, Walmart, another Argo partner, also announced plans to start using the startup's autonomous driving technology for last-mile deliveries in Austin, Texas; Miami; and Washington, DC. Argo also began autonomous deliveries for a food insecurity organization in Pittsburgh in 2022.
But evidently, none of those business models made sense, and without extra backers, Ford and VW are pulling out.
In its Q3 report to investors, also published on Wednesday, Ford said that it had "made a strategic decision to shift its capital spending from the L4 advanced driver assistance systems being developed by Argo AI to internally developed L2+/L3 technology. Earlier, Argo AI had been unable to attract new investors. Accordingly, Ford recorded a $2.7 billion non-cash, pretax impairment on its investment in Argo AI, resulting in an $827 million net loss for Q3."