1500 Robotics Startups Have Raised $90 Billion, But Investment Just Cratered

  • 📰 ForbesTech
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 26 sec. here
  • 2 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 14%
  • Publisher: 59%

日本 ニュース ニュース

日本 最新ニュース,日本 見出し

I'm an entrepreneur, founder, and writer. I've raised seed and series A funds, built websites and apps, and written a science fiction novel. After five years of full-time tech journalism (plus founding a research division) at VentureBeat, I started my own consultancy. But since I can't not write, I became a Forbes contributor.

1,500 robotics startups have raised about $90 billion since 2019. and 20 of them are unicorns with valuations in excess of $1 billion. That’s the good news. The bad news is that investment in robotics fell sharply to a five-year low in 2023, and one particular category, autonomous vehicles, has plummeted from $9.7 billion in 2021 to $2.2 billion in 2023.

The biggest sector for investment last year was vertical-specific robots, led by investments in defense and logistics. Out of a total investment of $4.1 billion, most went to logistics and security robots, with medical robots following:Autonomous vehicle startups are having a tough time right now.

Exits in the robotics space peaked in 2021 as well, with 36 deals valued at about $44 billion. In 2022, that dropped to about $26 billion, and in 2023, robotics exits cratered to under $2 billion.

このニュースをすぐに読めるように要約しました。ニュースに興味がある場合は、ここで全文を読むことができます。 続きを読む:

 /  🏆 318. in JP
 

コメントありがとうございます。コメントは審査後に公開されます。

日本 最新ニュース, 日本 見出し