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20 largest robotics investments during 1st half of 2019

By Eugene Demaitre | July 9, 2019

robotics investments

An autonomous Chevrolet Bolt electric vehicle from Cruise, which raised $1.15 billion in May 2019. | Credit: Cruise

Robotics companies have raised more than $15.6 billion during the first half of 2019. According to the robotics investments tracked and verified by The Robot Report, more than $2.6 billion has been raised on average per month. The year started slowly with $644 million raised in January, but there has been at least $1.3 billion raised each month thereafter.

For The Robot Report‘s investment analysis, autonomous vehicles, including technologies that support autonomous driving, and drones are considered robots. On the other hand, 3D printers, CNC systems, and various types of “hard” automation are not.

Robotics Investments for First 6 Months of 2019

Edit
Month Investment Amount
January $644M
February $4.3B
March $1.3B
April $6.5B
May $1.5B
June $1.4B
Yearly Total $15.64B

As you can see in the table below, autonomous vehicle investments make up a significant percentage of overall funding. The Robot Report will have a detailed breakdown of investments by sector in a follow-up article. Ten of the top 20 robotics investments tracked by The Robot Report belong to companies producing autonomous vehicles or autonomous vehicle enabling technologies. Autonomous vehicle companies raised 55% ($4.6 billion) of the total $8.2 billion raised in the 20 investments. The top three autonomous vehicle investments belong to Cruise ($1.15 billion), Uber ($1 billion) and Nuro ($940 million), which raised a combined $3.1 billion.

Healthcare robotics companies have also fared well in 2019. Intuitive Surgical raised $2 billion via a stock repurchase in February, while Think Surgical and Ekso Bionics raised $134 million and $100 million, respectively. HistoSonics raised $54 million in April for its medical robotics platform that destroy cancerous tumors without affecting surrounding tissue.

To stay updated about the latest robotics investments and acquisitions, check out The Robot Report‘s Investment Section.

20 Largest Robotics Investments During 1st Half of 2019

Edit
Company Funding (M$) Lead Investor Date Technology
Intuitive Surgical 2000 Stock Repurchase 2/1/19 Surgical Robots
Cruise 1150 Honda Motor Corp. 5/7/19 Autonomous Vehicles
Uber ATG 1000 SoftBank Vision Fund 4/18/19 Autonomous Vehicles
Nuro.ai 940 SoftBank Vision Fund 2/11/19 Autonomous Vehicles
Horizon Robotics 600 SK China 2/27/19 AI/IOT
Aurora Innovation 600 Amazon 2/7/19 Autonomous Vehicles
Weltmeister Motor 450 Baidu Inc. 3/11/19 Autonomous Vehicles
Cloudminds 300 SoftBank Vision Fund 3/26/19 Service Robots
Zipline 190 TPG 5/17/19 Drone Delivery
Innoviz Technologies 170 China Merchants Capital 3/26/19 LiDAR
Think Surgical 134 3/11/19 Surgical Robots
Beijing Auto AI Technology 104 Robert Bosch Venture Capital 1/24/19 AI
Black Sesame Technologies 100 Legend Capital 4/15/2019 Machine Learning
Ekso Bionics Holdings 100 Zhejiang Youchuang Venture Capital Investment Co. 1/30/19 Exoskeletons
TUSimple 95 Sina Corp 2/13/19 Autonomous Vehicles
Ouster 60 Runway Growth Capital 3/25/19 LiDAR
NASN Automotive 59.6 Matrix Partners China 1/30/19 Autonomous Vehicles
HistoSonics 54 Varian Medical 4/8/19 Medical Robots
Ike 52 Bain Capital Ventures 2/5/19 Autonomous Vehicles
Enflame 43.4 Redpoint China Ventures 6/6/2019 AI Chipmaker

Editors note: What defines robotics investments? The answer to this simple question is central in any attempt to quantify robotics investments with some degree of rigor. To make investment analyses consistent, repeatable, and valuable, it is critical to wring out as much subjectivity as possible during the evaluation process. This begins with a definition of terms and a description of assumptions.

Investors and investing
Investment should come from venture capital firms, corporate investment groups, angel investors, and other sources. Friends-and-family investments, government/non-governmental agency grants, and crowd-sourced funding are excluded.

Robotics and intelligent systems companies
Robotics companies must generate or expect to generate revenue from the production of robotics products (that sense, think, and act in the physical world), hardware or software subsystems and enabling technologies for robots, or services supporting robotics devices. For this analysis, autonomous vehicles (including technologies that support autonomous driving) and drones are considered robots, while 3D printers, CNC systems, and various types of “hard” automation are not.

Companies that are “robotic” in name only, or use the term “robot” to describe products and services that that do not enable or support devices acting in the physical world, are excluded. For example, this includes “software robots” and robotic process automation. Many firms have multiple locations in different countries. Company locations given in the analysis are based on the publicly listed headquarters in legal documents, press releases, etc.

Verification
Funding information is collected from a number of public and private sources. These include press releases from corporations and investment groups, corporate briefings, and association and industry publications. In addition, information comes from sessions at conferences and seminars, as well as during private interviews with industry representatives, investors, and others. Unverifiable investments are excluded.

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Filed Under: 3D printing • additive • stereolithography, Automotive, The Robot Report, Robotics • robotic grippers • end effectors

 

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