TLDR
- WeRide stock gains as Lenovo deal targets 200,000 autonomous vehicles
- Lenovo partnership strengthens WeRide’s Level 4 Robotaxi expansion plan
- WeRide and Lenovo aim to scale global autonomous vehicle deployment
- HPC 3.0 platform supports WeRide’s lower-cost Robotaxi rollout
- WRD stock rises as WeRide links Lenovo deal to global AV growth
WeRide Inc. (WRD) shares gained 2.64% to $8.17 as the company expanded its Lenovo partnership at Auto China 2026. The deal targets 200,000 autonomous vehicles over five years, including Robotaxis across global markets. the agreement strengthens WeRide’s push to scale Level 4 autonomous driving beyond pilot programs.
WeRide And Lenovo Expand Autonomous Driving Partnership
WeRide announced the broader Lenovo collaboration as autonomous driving moves toward larger commercial fleets. The companies plan to begin joint deployments in 2026 across several international markets. Besides Robotaxis, the rollout will support wider autonomous vehicle use in real-world transport networks.
The partnership brings together WeRide’s driving systems and Lenovo’s computing and supply chain capabilities. WeRide operates across more than 40 cities in 12 countries, giving it a broad global testing base. The company can use that footprint to support commercial launches in varied traffic environments.
Lenovo adds vehicle computing, Hybrid AI, manufacturing support, and global delivery infrastructure. These capabilities can help WeRide manage fleet production, deployment, and maintenance at scale. Moreover, the partnership links cloud systems, vehicle platforms, and computing hardware into one deployment framework.
HPC 3.0 Platform Supports Large Fleet Deployment
The companies launched the HPC 3.0 high-performance computing platform in July 2025. The platform first entered use in the mass-produced WeRide Robotaxi GXR. It uses Lenovo’s AD1 autonomous driving domain controller and NVIDIA DRIVE AGX Thor technology.
HPC 3.0 delivers more than 2,000 TOPS of AI computing power for Level 4 driving. The platform also uses redundant hardware and software to meet strict safety requirements. Hence, it targets reliable operation across complex roads, cities, and regulatory conditions.
Cost remains a key issue for Robotaxi growth, and the platform addresses that challenge. HPC 3.0 cuts autonomous driving suite costs by 50% compared with HPC 2.0. It also lowers total lifecycle ownership costs by 84%, supporting wider commercial deployment.
WRD Stock Gains As Commercial Scale Becomes Central
WeRide stock held intraday gains after early volatility and stabilized near the afternoon session. The stock traded at $8.17, up $0.21, as the Lenovo deal added a clear growth angle. The move remained measured as the market assessed execution plans and deployment timelines.
The company’s broader strategy focuses on turning autonomous driving into a repeatable commercial service. Robotaxis remain one of the most advanced use cases for Level 4 autonomy. They offer clear benefits through round-the-clock service, lower human error, and better fleet use.
The Lenovo agreement gives WeRide a stronger base for large-scale global rollout. It also places computing efficiency and supply chain strength at the center of its expansion plan. As a result, WRD stock gained attention as WeRide linked technology progress with a major deployment target.


