The removal of a dozen Waymo robotaxis from Uber's Phoenix fleet triggered a 4% stock decline — but the broader autonomous strategy remains intact.
Uber Technologies Inc. shares slid more than 4% on June 29 after Alphabet Inc.'s Waymo ended their self-driving partnership in Phoenix, pushing the stock near $72 and extending its year-to-date decline to nearly 12%.
The partnership, struck in 2023, was "an intentionally limited deployment, reaching just over a dozen vehicles dedicated to the program," an Uber spokesperson said. Waymo has since reintegrated those vehicles into its own Phoenix fleet, where they remain available through the Waymo app. The autonomous vehicles are still available on Uber in Austin and Atlanta, where hundreds of Waymo cars operate exclusively on the platform.
"The Phoenix pilot was a productive initiative that paved the way for future expansions and partnerships across the globe," a Waymo spokesperson said. The split follows Waymo's recall of nearly 3,900 robotaxis in the U.S. earlier this month after a software issue caused vehicles to enter closed freeway construction zones.
The Numbers Beneath the Headline
Uber's operating metrics tell a different story than the stock price suggests. The company generated $1.9 billion in non-GAAP operating income in the first quarter of 2026, a 42% expansion from a year earlier. That cash flow is funding a $3 billion share repurchase program, with Chief Executive Officer Dara Khosrowshahi retaining substantial equity exposure after receiving 293,637 new stock options.
The subscription ecosystem provides additional insulation. Uber One members have surpassed 50 million, accounting for more than 50% of total gross bookings. When consumers pay a monthly fee for mobility and delivery, they care less about which autonomous system fulfills the ride — they just want it done within the app.
Options market data suggests institutional investors are taking the other side of the retail selloff. July 2026 options chain data reveals unusually heavy call volume clustered at the $77 and $85 strike prices, indicating sophisticated positioning for a near-term reversal.
Backfilling the Supply Chain
Uber is already preparing a replacement autonomous partner for Phoenix, though it has not named the new provider. The company is advancing a multi-year program integrating the Nuro Driver artificial intelligence system on Lucid Group Inc. vehicles, targeting a 35,000-vehicle fleet exclusive to Uber. The service is expected to launch in the San Francisco Bay Area in late 2026 and expand to Houston by mid-2027.
Chief Executive Officer Dara Khosrowshahi said on the company's first-quarter earnings call that autonomous mobility trips on Uber increased more than tenfold year over year, with the service now live in eight cities and plans to expand to as many as 15 by year-end.
The transition from human-driven ride-hailing to an autonomous network will inevitably see individual partnerships form and dissolve as hardware developers test pricing power. Uber's strategy of diversifying across multiple autonomous providers — turning competing robotaxi fleets into interchangeable capacity — may ultimately determine whether the stock's robotaxi premium holds or erodes.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.