Humanoid startup Apptronik raises $520 million with backing from Google and Mercedes-Benz

By Krystal Hu Feb 11 (Reuters) – Humanoid robotics startup Apptronik raised $520 million in a funding round backed by investors including Google and Mercedes-Benz, the company said โ€Œon Wednesday, as it seeks to commercialize its robots for industrial use. The round โ€Œvalued the Austin, Texas-based company at about $5 billion, a source familiar with…


Humanoid startup Apptronik raises 0 million with backing from Google and Mercedes-Benz
Humanoid startup Apptronik raises 0 million with backing from Google and Mercedes-Benz

By Krystal Hu

Feb 11 (Reuters) – Humanoid robotics startup Apptronik raised $520 million in a funding round backed by investors including Google and Mercedes-Benz, the company said โ€Œon Wednesday, as it seeks to commercialize its robots for industrial use.

The round โ€Œvalued the Austin, Texas-based company at about $5 billion, a source familiar with the matter said. B Capital and โ€‹the Qatar Investment Authority also participated in the so-called Series A extension, roughly a year after Apptronik raised $415 million.

Apptronik plans to use the fresh capital to develop new versions of its Apollo robot, ramp up production and expand its workforce beyond its current headcount of more โ€Œthan 300 employees. It is also โ planning a robot training and data collection facility in Austin and an office in California.

Chief Executive Jeff Horden said the company expects more โ deployments of humanoid robots in factories and warehouses this year and next.

The funding comes as companies race to develop human-like robots for industrial work; Tesla and Nvidia-backed Figure AI are trying โ€‹to build โ€‹and deploy humanoids at scale. Figure AI was โ€‹recently valued at $39 billion.

Apptronik is initially โ€Œtargeting manufacturing and logistics customers and has commercial agreements with Mercedes-Benz and GXO Logistics. Over the longer term, it is seeking to expand into assisted care and home-use applications.

Its humanoid Apollo has both legs and wheels to navigate industrial environments. Apptronik says human-scale robots can access existing workstations and shelving, potentially replacing some task-specific industrial machines over time.

The company โ€Œis also deepening its partnership with Google DeepMind, โ€‹which co-develops the Gemini-based artificial intelligence models for the โ€‹Apollo platform. Apptronik provides the hardware โ€‹and real-world training data from its deployments, Horden said.

Founded in 2016 as โ€Œa spinout from the University of Texas, โ€‹Apptronik traces its origins โ€‹to early work on NASA’s Valkyrie humanoid robot program.

Howard Morgan, a general partner at B Capital, said the company has a competitive advantage in its robotic โ€‹hand design and has built โ€Œa sizable commercial order pipeline.

“The valuation relative to its potential is more attractive โ€‹than some of its peers,” Morgan said in an interview.

(Reporting by Krystal Hu โ€‹in San Francisco; Editing by Thomas Derpinghaus)

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