Skip to content
Tech News
← Back to articles

Alibaba-affiliate Ant Group rushes into humanoid robots with a dozen deals in 18 months

read original more articles
Why This Matters

Ant Group's aggressive investments in humanoid robotics signal a significant push toward integrating AI and robotics into everyday life, especially in elder care, education, and companionship. This move highlights the growing importance of robotics in the tech industry and consumer markets, driven by China's expanding robotics ecosystem and technological capabilities.

Key Takeaways

Zeroth W1, produced by Lexiang Technology, has obtained the Wall-E IP authorization for the Disney animated film "RoboCop" and will be unveiled at AWE 2026 in Shanghai, China on March 15, 2026.

BEIJING — Alibaba -affiliate Ant Group is ramping up its move into humanoid robots.

Ant has led a 500 million yuan ($73.58 million) funding round in humanoid robotics company Zeroth, the start-up announced Thursday.

It's the 12th company in the sector that Ant has invested in since the beginning of 2025, according to CNBC analysis of PitchBook data. The investments tracked by CNBC range from humanoid robotics companies Galaxea and Unitree, to parts and software start-ups such as Linkerbot, Hypershell and Genrobot AI.

After regulators halted Ant's giant IPO in 2020, the operator of mobile payments app Alipay has launched a healthcare services app and released its own artificial intelligence models. In late 2024, Ant also established a humanoid robot subsidiary called RobbyAnt that subsequently developed its own robot.

Ant has released an AI and robotics-friendly version of its Alipay mobile payments service, which is an area Zeroth said it would like to cooperate in.

Monolith, Geely Capital, 37 Interactive Entertainment and Hua Capital also participated in Zeroth's latest funding round. The pre-Series A raise brings total funds raised to 1 billion yuan.

The start-up's founder, Guo Renjie, told CNBC that Zeroth focused on securing companies with experience in industries such as smartphone chips. He said the company's robots currently use chips from Horizon Robotics.

Zeroth Robotics, known in China as Suzhou JoyIn Intelligent Technology, was founded in late 2024.

The start-up plans a phased approach to realizing humanoid robots for the home, Guo told CNBC in an interview earlier this year. The company is starting with companionship robots for elderly care and pet care, followed by robots for children's education, he said.

... continue reading