Giant chipmakers such as Qualcomm, Nvidia and Mobileye have become linchpins in the auto industry's efforts to transform vehicles into rolling supercomputers.
The three companies are locked in a fierce competition to provide the building blocks and the smarts to power a new generation of vehicles.
As cars increasingly become defined by software — capable of getting over-the-air updates and toggling computing workloads between on-board systems and the cloud — the early advantage tilts toward Qualcomm.
The wireless backbone that Qualcomm developed decades ago for mobile devices differentiates it from competitors in the automotive realm, and it's providing an essential link between those on-board and off-board systems, said Steve McDowell, chief analyst and founder of NAND Research.
"Qualcomm's secret sauce here, from a technology perspective, is the connectivity piece," he said.
Connectivity has provided the company a tail wind. Qualcomm reported $811 million in second-quarter automotive revenue, an 87 percent year-over-year increase versus the same time frame last year.
The company's rivals have reported more modest results.
Nvidia ranks as a $3 trillion company, with more than $30 billion in revenue reported Aug. 28 in its latest quarterly results. But it reported automotive-specific revenue of $346 million, 37 percent ahead of the same period in 2023 — robust growth — but less than half of Qualcomm's growth rate.
Mobileye, a prime supplier of chips and driver-assist technology, reported revenue of $439 million in the second quarter, a 3 percent decrease from the second of quarter 2023. Mobileye reduced expectations for the remainder of 2024, citing China's sluggish economy.
Direct comparisons of the three companies can be complicated. There's commonality in that all provide chips and software for vehicles. But they specialize in distinct aspects of in-car technology — infotainment, driver-assist and digital cockpits prominently among them — and their offerings are often aimed at different tiers of the market.
"They all play within similar spaces, but their approaches come from very different places," said Phil Amsrud, associate director at S&P Global Mobility who focuses on semiconductor research and automated driving technologies.