It now has a notably higher number of routes where its self-driving system can operate.
On the same day it announced the expansion, it beat the consensus analyst bottom-line estimate for its fourth quarter.
Aurora Innovation (NASDAQ: AUR), an autonomous truck technology specialist that moved from the developmental to the commercial stage last year, had a hot month in cold February.
The specialized auto company announced a dramatic expansion of its network, and on such an indication that its business is viable, investors piled into the stock, helping push it to an 11% gain over the month. A narrower-than-expected quarterly net loss also helped.
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On Feb. 11, Aurora announced that it had tripled its driverless network to ten routes in the American South and Southwest. This coincides with the rollout of the fourth version of Aurora Driver, the company's autonomous truck operation system.
Image source: Getty Images.
Aurora said that operations under the system were "validated" on the long (1,000-mile or so) stretch between the cities of Fort Worth, Texas, and Phoenix, Arizona. The company claimed that, without the mandatory rest breaks required of human drivers under federal law, a truck powered by its self-driving technology could travel that route in half the time it takes a person (since an autonomous vehicle doesn't have to take such breaks).
The company added that it already has a customer using its services for the Fort Worth-Phoenix run -- Hirschbach, a long-standing trucking business.
With the network expansion, Aurora wrote, it can also cover the routes Dallas-Houston, Fort Worth-El Paso, El Paso-Phoenix, and Dallas-Laredo.
In the press release heralding the move, Aurora quoted co-founder and CEO Chris Urmson as saying that "Expanding across the Sun Belt and introducing customer endpoints enables us to provide our customers with the capacity they need to move goods at a scale that wasn't possible before."
In what might not be a coincidence, Aurora published its final earnings release for calendar 2025 on the same day, Feb. 11. For the fourth quarter, the next-generation transport company earned $1 million in revenue, comparing very well to the $0 of the same period of 2024. Its net loss deepened, although not alarmingly, to $206 million ($0.11 per share) from fourth quarter 2024's $193 million.
Aurora is not a stock covered by many analysts; nevertheless, the consensus estimate of that small group was $1.69 million for revenue, so the company missed on the top line. On the flip side, those pundits were collectively expecting a slightly deeper net loss of $0.12 per share.
Aurora is an intriguing play on the transportation future we all know is coming. This expansion is important because it's a significant operational leap at this relatively early stage. I'd be bullish on this stock, though anyone considering it should be aware that the company is likely to continue posting losses before it reaches scale. It's therefore a buy only for patient investors with a higher-than-average tolerance for risk, in my view.
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Eric Volkman has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.