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Aurora Shares Rise as Wall Street Looks to Driverless Trucks
29 May 2026
3 mins read

Aurora Shares Rise as Wall Street Looks to Driverless Trucks

NEW YORK, May 29, 2026, 15:03 (EDT)

  • Aurora Innovation shares rose 3.6% to $7.325 Friday afternoon. The stock has gained 92.7% since Jan. 1, MarketScreener’s real-time Cboe BZX estimate showed.
  • Northland Securities started coverage at Outperform and set a price target of $11, according to MarketBeat, which lists analyst Michael Latimore on the call.
  • On May 28, a Form 4 filing from the SEC showed groups tied to director Reid Hoffman sold around 1.2 million Class A shares.

Aurora Innovation shares moved higher Friday after Northland Securities picked up coverage of the autonomous-trucking firm, setting an Outperform rating and a price target of $11. The call gave the stock another boost after it’s already almost doubled this year.

Aurora’s shift is key for investors, who now have to gauge something new. The company isn’t just about tests anymore. Aurora is going after paid driverless freight routes, aiming to offer commercial trucking runs. But it’s still using up cash and needs its partners for hardware.

Northland pointed to new artificial intelligence models that can back “physical agentic AI” uses like autonomous driving. Agentic AI refers to software able to plan and act with minimal human guidance. For Aurora, the issue is whether this tech can operate safely on busy highways with big trucks. Investing.com

Tech led the way as major U.S. indexes moved higher Friday, with AI optimism in focus. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq both gained, according to Reuters. Aurora, which is on the Nasdaq, traded in step with those risk-on flows.

A piece of morning news went the other way. A Form 4 from the SEC showed entities linked to director Reid Hoffman sold 1,202,354 Class A shares on May 28 at a weighted average price of $7.2741. That average weighs bigger trades more than smaller ones; sales in the filing ranged from $7.08 to $7.3850.

Aurora’s sales plan centers on its Aurora Driver tech and its “Driver as a Service” model, letting customers subscribe to the system and services instead of buying trucks outright. In its latest quarterly filing, the company said it expects revenue will come from a per-mile or similar structure once the business ramps up. Aurora Innovation, Inc.

Aurora CEO Chris Urmson said in the May 6 earnings report that the company is “on track to put hundreds of driverless trucks on the road this year.” The same results release said Aurora aims to have over 200 driverless trucks deployed by year-end. The company also noted Hirschbach’s plan to scale up to 500 trucks with the Aurora Driver, with deliveries starting in 2027. Aurora Innovation, Inc.

Aurora’s first-quarter numbers are still early. The company reported $1 million in revenue and a net loss of $223 million. R&D climbed to $195 million. Aurora finished March with $273 million in cash and cash equivalents, $952 million in short-term investments, and $52 million in long-term investments, all before restricted cash.

Bulls stay with Aurora for the customer pickup. Aurora and McLane, part of Berkshire Hathaway, announced May 6 they’ll launch driverless runs in Texas. That’s after their pilot ran up over 280,000 driverless miles and delivered 1,400 loads. “Aurora’s exceptional safety performance and commitment to operational excellence,” McLane Restaurant president Susan Adzick said. Aurora Innovation, Inc.

Volvo Autonomous Solutions and DSV said this month they’ve started running autonomous freight between Dallas and Houston. The routes use the Volvo VNL Autonomous truck and the Aurora Driver, working between Aurora’s Texas terminals. Right now, a safety driver stays in the cab. “Autonomous driving is moving toward real-world operations,” DSV Road CEO Helmut Schweighofer said. Aurora Innovation, Inc.

Volvo’s approach is messy, with its Autona/freight business pairing Volvo trucks with self-driving systems from both Aurora and Waabi. Aurora can supply tech for one route but still competes with other autonomy firms on different routes. Northland analyst Michael Latimore has Kodiak AI, another public player in autonomous trucking, on his latest list, too.

Aurora’s basic bear case hasn’t changed. The company is still losing money and scaling up a business that needs a lot of hardware. In its 10-Q, Aurora said it’s expecting more operating losses ahead, and it might have to raise more capital. The company burned through $159 million in operating cash in Q1 and depends on AUMOVIO, the former Continental, as its sole supplier for its upcoming Aurora Driver hardware systems.

Traders are still buying on the new analyst note, sticking with the idea that there’s option value here. What matters next isn’t another route reveal, but whether Aurora can turn its test drives in Texas into a big enough fleet to start changing the numbers on its income statement.

Michał Rogucki is a senior markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and macroeconomic developments. A graduate of Humboldt University of Berlin, he previously worked in investment research and market analysis before transitioning to financial journalism. He covers the trends and events that matter most to investors worldwide.

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