Artificial Intelligence

Chinese Startup MagicLab Robotics Expands Global Ambitions Through Embodied AI

With operations across 50 countries, MagicLab is pairing new robot systems with a platform strategy aimed at wider commercial adoption

Updated

May 1, 2026 2:16 PM

A standing yellow robotic arm. PHOTO: UNSPLASH

MagicLab Robotics is a Chinese startup that describes itself as an embodied AI company. At an event in Silicon Valley this week, it outlined its global ambitions and introduced new products designed for real-world use. The company said its international business now spans more than 50 countries and regions, with overseas markets accounting for 60% of total sales in 2025. That gives some indication of how quickly Chinese robotics firms are expanding beyond their home market.

At the centre of the announcement was MagicLab’s latest product line-up. It included Magic-Mix, described as a foundational world model for robots, the H01 dexterous robotic hand and its humanoid robot, MagicBot X1. In practical terms, the company is trying to build robots that can better understand their surroundings and perform physical tasks with greater precision. That is the core idea behind embodied AI, where intelligence is combined with movement and interaction in the real world rather than limited to software alone.

MagicLab says it develops both hardware and software internally. Its product range includes humanoid robots and four-legged machines, with systems designed for factories, commercial services and home use. The company also outlined where it sees demand emerging. It listed sectors such as healthcare, manufacturing, logistics, security, public safety, education and household assistance.

That wide spread of target markets reflects a broader challenge in robotics. Building capable machines is only one part of the equation. The harder task is finding enough practical uses where customers are willing to pay for them.

MagicLab also used the summit to set out a long-term commercial goal. It projected a path toward US$14 billion in annual revenue by 2036 through wider adoption of embodied AI systems. It also announced what it calls the “Co-Create 1000 Initiative”, a plan to work with external developers and partner companies.

As part of that effort, the startup said it plans to invest US$1 billion over the next five years to build a developer ecosystem that would allow third parties to create new applications for its robots. The strategy mirrors what happened in smartphones and cloud software, where ecosystems often mattered as much as the original hardware. If robotics follows a similar path, companies that attract developers could gain an advantage over those selling machines alone.

For now, MagicLab’s announcement is less about immediate breakthroughs and more about positioning. The company is presenting itself not simply as a robot maker, but as a platform business seeking a role in the next phase of intelligent machines.

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M&A & IPOs

Qiming Venture Partners–Backed Axera Goes Public on Hong Kong Stock Exchange

AI’s expansion into the physical world is reshaping what investors choose to back

Updated

March 17, 2026 1:02 AM

Exterior view of the Exchange Square in Central, Hong Kong. PHOTO: UNSPLASH

Artificial intelligence is often discussed in terms of large models trained in distant data centres. Less visible, but increasingly consequential, is the layer of computing that enables machines to interpret and respond to the physical world in real-time. As AI systems move from abstract software into vehicles, cameras and factory equipment, the chips that power on-device decision-making are becoming strategic assets in their own right.

It is within this shift that Axera, a Shanghai-based semiconductor company, began trading on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange on February 10 under the ticker symbol 00600.HK. The company priced its shares at HK$28.2, debuting with a market capitalization of approximately HK$16.6 billion. Its listing marks the first time a Chinese company focused primarily on AI perception and edge inference chips has gone public in the city — a milestone that underscores growing investor interest in the hardware layer of artificial intelligence.

The listing comes at a time when demand for flexible, on-device intelligence is expanding. As manufacturers, automakers and infrastructure operators integrate AI into physical systems, the need for specialized processors capable of handling visual and sensor data efficiently has grown. At the same time, China’s domestic semiconductor industry has faced increasing pressure to build local capabilities across the chip value chain. Companies such as Axera sit at the intersection of these dynamics, serving both commercial markets and broader industrial policy priorities.

For Hong Kong, the debut adds to a cohort of technology companies seeking public capital to scale hardware-intensive businesses. Unlike software firms, semiconductor designers operate in a capital-intensive environment shaped by supply chains, fabrication partnerships and rapid product cycles. Their presence on the exchange reflects a maturing investor appetite for AI infrastructure, not just consumer-facing applications.

Axera’s early backer, Qiming Venture Partners, led the company’s pre-A financing round in 2020 and continued to participate in subsequent rounds. Prior to the IPO, it held more than 6 percent of the company, making it the second-largest institutional investor. The public offering provides liquidity for early investors and new funding for a company operating in a highly competitive and technologically demanding sector.

Axera’s market debut does not resolve the competitive challenges of the semiconductor industry, where innovation cycles are short and global competition is intense. But it does signal that investors are placing tangible value on the hardware, enabling AI’s expansion beyond the cloud. In that sense, the listing represents more than a corporate milestone; it reflects a broader transition in how artificial intelligence is built, deployed and financed — moving steadily from software abstraction toward the silicon that makes real-world autonomy possible.