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Mobility tech deal value was up 13.9% quarter over quarter, led by autonomous driving startups, according to PitchBook

My favorite thing about mobility tech is that it can mean all sorts of things, from EVs to scooters to underwater drones.

But autonomous driving ruled the day in mobility tech in Q2 2024, in which some big-name deals got done by big-name investors. Nvidia particularly has been involved in a number of high-profile, autonomous driving-related deals. Consider: In recent months, Wayve raised a $1.1 billion Series C led by Nvidia, Eclipse Ventures, and SoftBank, while Scale AI raised a $1 billion Series F led by Accel and Nvidia. Nvidia was also in the mix as an investor in Waabi’s $200 million Series B, which was led by Uber and Khosla Ventures.

Q2 saw some green shoots for mobility tech as a sector, as VCs invested $6.7 billion in mobility tech, marking a 13.9% quarter-over-quarter increase in deal value, according to PitchBook. This also marked deal value growth of 52.8% year over year—though the spike in deal value hinges in part on those large autonomous driving-focused funding rounds.

In fact, mobility tech deal count in Q2 was down 27.4% year over year and about 30% year-to-date. To me what that suggests is the same story as we’ve ultimately heard in other sectors—that the biggest names are drawing lots of funding, while smaller or less-well-known startups are more likely to be left in the lurch.

Autonomous driving has been hot this summer, as Alphabet-owned Waymo lifted the waiting list in San Francisco and became available to everyone. Meanwhile, Amazon-owned Zoox is similarly preparing to roll out to customers, my colleague Jessica Mathews recently reported. But as autonomous driving gains real-world traction, scrutiny on (and concerns about) robotaxi companies has ramped up. GM-owned Cruise has particularly become a story about how quickly an autonomous driving startup can endanger pedestrians, as Mathews has previously reported.

Now, I'll level with you: All these autonomous driving-related rounds are all fine and good, but I’m stuck on the underwater drones. According to PitchBook, that market is expected to reach $15 billion by 2032, up from $4.4 billion last year. That figure includes military applications, but it turns out that on its own marine data is already a roughly $1.3 billion market, projected to grow. If there are any marine data-gatherers out there, you know where to find me.

Scoop… My colleague Leo Schwartz scooped the news on crypto-focused Hack VC’s new $77 million fund. Read the whole story here.

Toon time… Here’s this month’s cartoon, by Ian Foley.

See you tomorrow,

Allie Garfinkle
Twitter:
@agarfinks
Email: alexandra.garfinkle@fortune.com
Submit a deal for the Term Sheet newsletter here.

Nina Ajemian curated the deals section of today’s newsletter.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com