“We are not having talks with Apple about developing self-driving cars,” Hyundai said in a statement.
The statement added that Hyundai has received requests from “numerous companies” about developing self-driving electric cars, but that “no decision has been made as we are in the beginning stage.”
Kia Motors, which is owned by Hyundai, referred CNN Business to its parent company’s statement.
Apple declined to comment.
The announcement jolted investors who had been betting on some kind of tie-up between the companies based on weeks of speculation and local news reports. Kia’s stock plummeted 13%, putting it on track for its worst day since 2008. Hyundai’s stock fell 5.6%.
Interest from Apple in South Korea’s automakers made sense. Analysts have pointed out that Hyundai has been open to joining forces with other companies and even tech firms; it already has partnerships with with Chinese search giant Baidu and US chipmaker Nvidia on autonomous driving, for example.
The automaker has also already made significant strides on next-generation vehicles, including hydrogen fuel-cell cars and an electric vehicle manufacturing platform it unveiled in December.
But Apple may also choose to enter multiple partnerships, with analysts floating other major carmakers such as Honda, Tata Motors’ Jaguar Land Rover and Geely, the Chinese owner of Volvo, as potential options.
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