Aurora Innovation stock jumps 10% premarket as Amazon AWS, Aumovio deal spotlights driverless trucks

Aurora Innovation stock jumps 10% premarket as Amazon AWS, Aumovio deal spotlights driverless trucks

NEW YORK, January 7, 2026, 07:33 EST — Premarket

  • Aurora Innovation shares rose about 10% in premarket trading after an AWS-Aumovio autonomous-driving development pact tied to Aurora.
  • The deal highlights the industry’s push to speed safety validation for “Level 4” driverless systems.
  • Traders are watching whether the stock can hold above $4 ahead of an expected mid-February earnings update.

Aurora Innovation, Inc. shares rose about 10% to $4.40 in premarket trading on Wednesday, adding roughly 40 cents from the prior close, after Amazon’s cloud unit and German automotive supplier Aumovio expanded a partnership linked to Aurora’s autonomous trucks. AWS will become Aumovio’s preferred cloud provider for autonomous-driving development, and the companies said the new tools are set to be used for Aurora’s planned deployment of driverless trucks at scale from 2027. “The big accelerant in the industry has been the use of engineering AI,” AWS automotive and manufacturing chief Ozgur Tohumcu told Reuters. 1

The tie-up lands as autonomous-vehicle developers face pressure to show they can move beyond demonstrations and into repeatable commercial operations. One stumbling block is proving a driverless system can handle rare, hard-to-find scenarios — a costly process that can stretch timelines and budgets.

Level 4 autonomy refers to vehicles that can drive themselves without a human in defined conditions, but validation demands mountains of data and testing. Investors have tended to reward partnerships that promise faster development cycles and more industrial-scale rollout plans, while penalizing open-ended timelines.

Aumovio said the collaboration plugs agentic and generative AI into its development and validation workflow and will be used first on a “significant customer project” to deploy autonomous trucks at scale for Aurora. The company said the Aurora Driver has satisfied more than 10,000 requirements and passed 4.5 million tests, and that Aumovio will provide a backup computer designed to keep the truck safe if the primary system fails. “Working with AWS to power the development of the Aurora Driver was critical,” said Matt Ellis, a senior vice president of software engineering at Aurora. 2

The Aurora move comes as CES in Las Vegas puts fresh attention on autonomous driving hardware and commercialization. Rival self-driving truck firm Kodiak AI said this week it teamed up with Bosch to scale up production of autonomous trucking hardware and sensors, underscoring the industry’s shift toward freight as a nearer-term use case than consumer robotaxis. 3

Aurora’s shares have traded between $3.60 and $10.77 over the past 52 weeks, and the stock was pressing the mid-$4 range in early trade. Pivot levels tracked by Barchart put near-term resistance around $4.55 and first support near $4.12. 4

But the upside case still hinges on execution. Any safety incident, regulatory setback or slowdown in customer adoption could reset expectations, while the long development cycle leaves investors focused on cash use and milestones rather than near-term revenue.

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