The Humanoid IPO Race: Agility’s $2.5B Nasdaq SPAC vs. Unitree’s $5.9B STAR Market Debut
The humanoid robotics sector is shifting from flashy demos to public market scrutiny. Agility Robotics is going public via a $2.5B SPAC, while Chinese giant Unitree secures approval for a $618M Shanghai IPO at a $5.9B valuation.
Key takeaways
- • The humanoid robotics sector is shifting from flashy demos to public market scrutiny
- • Agility Robotics is going public via a $2.5B SPAC, while Chinese giant Unitree secures approval for a $618M Shanghai IPO at a $5.9B valuation

The Humanoid IPO Race: Agility’s $2.5B Nasdaq SPAC vs. Unitree’s $5.9B STAR Market Debut
For years, the humanoid robotics sector was defined by viral videos of backflips, choreographed dances, and proof-of-concept factory pilots. But mid-2026 has brought a sudden, aggressive shift. The era of "hype protection" is officially over.
In a massive double-header of financial news, the world’s leading physical AI companies are moving to the public markets. Oregon-based Agility Robotics has announced a definitive merger to go public on the Nasdaq at a $2.5 billion valuation. Simultaneously, China’s Unitree Robotics has secured regulatory approval for a massive $618 million IPO on Shanghai’s STAR Market, implying a valuation of approximately $5.9 billion (42 billion yuan).
The race is no longer just about whose robot has the best dexterity—it is a battle of contrasting business models, production scales, and capital structures.
Two Paths to Public Capital: SPAC vs. STAR Market
The divergent strategies of these two giants illustrate the geopolitical and operational division in the robotics landscape.
1. Agility Robotics: The Western Pragmatist ($2.5B Valuation)
Agility is merging with the special-purpose acquisition company (SPAC) Churchill Capital Corp XI to list under the ticker AGLT. The deal is expected to yield more than $620 million in gross proceeds, anchored by a $200 million PIPE (Private Investment in Public Equity) led by electronics manufacturing giant Foxconn.
Rather than chasing generalized, jack-of-all-trades home assistants, Agility has focused purely on logistics and warehouse automation. Its flagship bird-legged robot, Digit, has already clocked over 65,000 hours of real-world operations across facilities for giants like Amazon, GXO, and Toyota. Agility is using its cash influx to scale production of Digit v5—a "cooperatively safe" cobot designed to work directly alongside humans—backed by an impressive $300 million contracted order book.

2. Unitree Robotics: The Eastern Scale Monster ($5.9B Valuation)
While Agility has focused on deep commercial integration with a smaller fleet, Hangzhou-based Unitree is playing a high-volume, "capacity-first" manufacturing game.
Securing the green light from the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) for its STAR Market debut, Unitree is targeting a valuation of up to $5.9 billion. Unlike almost every Western counterpart, Unitree's financials are already public and highly compelling: the company generated 1.7 billion yuan (~$235 million USD) in revenue in 2025, turning a net adjusted profit of 591 million yuan.
Unitree’s strategy relies on dramatic cost reduction. It shipped over 5,500 humanoids in 2025 alone—representing over 25% of the global market. By pricing its base G1 humanoid at an ultra-disruptive $16,000, Unitree has aggressively cornered the academic, research, and developer ecosystems.
The Clash of Real-World Metrics
As both companies make their public debuts, Wall Street and global investors will have to weigh two radically different investment theses:
| Metric / Strategy | Agility Robotics (USA) | Unitree Robotics (China) |
|---|---|---|
| Implied Valuation | $2.5 Billion | ~$5.9 Billion (42B Yuan) |
| Go-Public Vehicle | SPAC Merger (Nasdaq: AGLT) | STAR Market IPO (Shanghai) |
| Key Advantage | High-trust enterprise contracts ($300M+ order book) | Unmatched volume (5,500+ units shipped in 2025) |
| Flagship Hardware | Digit v5 (Industrial Cobot) | G1 / H1 Series (Mass-market platform) |
| Core Target Market | Fortune 500 logistics & warehousing | Research, developer platforms & Chinese manufacturing |
While Unitree has captured a massive early lead in unit economics and shipment volume, the majority of its sales have gone to R&D and data collection rather than sustained industrial work. Agility, on the other hand, is betting that public markets will value its deeply integrated, multi-year enterprise contracts over raw, un-deployed unit numbers.
Whichever model wins, one thing is certain: the humanoid robotics sector has graduated from the research lab. Physical AI is now a high-stakes, multi-billion-dollar public market battleground.
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