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THE INVESTOR

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app cars could mean that thousands of

acres of public and private car parks,

some in prime locations, could be put

to different and better uses.

The government’s stated approach to

driverless vehicles is to leave current

laws in place but to introduce reforms

‘as we gather real-life experience’.

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But

lawyer Alex Glassbrook, author of

The

Law of Driverless Cars

, explains that we

will be entering uncharted territory,

especially in terms of data.‘The app car

is set to be the most significant object

an individual has for giving and receiving

data about themselves, with the volume

rising massively,’ says Glassbrook.

Moreover, he cautions that new-

generation cars are likely to spawn novel

crimes; and, of course, that the car will

see the passenger as someone to whom

it can market a range of products.

Even if we can surmise the probable

direction of the transition to driverless

cars, it does not imply that it will be

easy to invest in it profitably.There is

the same difficulty reading the situation

as there was in the time of the dotcom

bubble, nearly 20 years ago. Forecasts

that the internet would be the next big

thing were of course correct; but more

start-ups fail than become anAmazon

and even the successful ones don’t

always generate a profit in the first few

years. Hence some fund managers

suggest it may be wiser to pick winners

from among the less glamorous

incumbents if these companies have solid

cash flow and can afford to reinvent their

business model.Toyota, for example, has

been helped by its early lead in hybrid

car technology andVolvo has set the pace

by claiming it will be the first premium

manufacturer to go electric across its

range.

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Even the German giants are

belatedly joining the revolution.

On the face of it, one of the asset

classes with the bleakest prospects is

that of classic cars. Until recently, steep

rises in values made it the perfect

‘passion investment’.

12

Yet in a brave

new world where ‘human driving’

becomes a costly and highly regulated

activity, that may cease to be the case.

Then again, nostalgia could make the

car you can own and drive yourself

even more an object of desire.

New-generation cars

will see the passenger

as someone towhom

it canmarket products

One of the most marked impacts of

the car’s transformation will be on

property.Town and country

development has always been framed by

the forms of transport that are current.

Wider car ownership, for example, gave

rise to urban sprawl in the 1930s.

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Experience suggests that once driverless

cars come along, people will see this as

a chance to commute from faraway

places where they sleep – or even sleep

in the car en route. In this scenario, a

larger and cheaper house outside the city

could reduce the price differential

between urban and rural areas.

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Property developers might no longer

be required to provide parking spaces for

each dwelling.And the advent of fleets of

Future-proof

MIT spin-off

nuTonomy is pushing the development

of software for self-driving cars;

(below) there’s no need to go

to a car hire outlet when your

smartphone can find a self-drive

vehicle near your current location