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Changan's Robot Pivot: China's Sixth-Largest Carmaker Targets Humanoid Mass Production by 2028
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Changan's Robot Pivot: China's Sixth-Largest Carmaker Targets Humanoid Mass Production by 2028
6 APR 2026

Changan Automobile, one of China's largest state-owned automakers, has formally registered a robotics subsidiary. Changan Tianshu Intelligent Robot (Chongqing) Co., Ltd. was established on March 31 with 450 million yuan ($62 million) in registered capital.

The company published a timeline that leaves little room for ambiguity:

  • Q1 2026: First specialized vehicle-component robot
  • 2027: General-purpose humanoid debut
  • 2028: Mass production
  • 2030: Family service robots
  • 2035: Low-altitude industrial ecosystem, 100 billion yuan target

From cars to robots

The new entity is a joint venture. China Changan Automobile Group and Changan Automobile hold 50%, Chongqing Changan Technology takes 10%, and Chenzhi Automobile Technology rounds out the ownership.

Changan calls its approach "1+N+X": the humanoid robot is the core thread (1), vehicle components and mobility ecosystems are the extensions (N), specialized service applications fill the gaps (X). The "Tianshu" brand, previously an automotive intelligence platform inside Changan, now stands on its own as a robotics company.

The automaker-to-robot pipeline

Changan is not the first. BYD, Xpeng, GAC and Geely have all announced robotics programs in the past twelve months. The logic is identical across the board: automakers already run supply chains for motors, sensors, batteries and precision manufacturing. The same components power humanoid robots.

What separates Changan is the specificity. A 2028 target for humanoid mass production is aggressive, even by Chinese standards. Most competitors are still showing prototypes at trade fairs.

The $62 million in registered capital looks modest. But Changan's real backing comes from its parent: state-owned China Changan Automobile Group, headquartered in Chongqing, a city that is spending heavily to position itself as a robotics manufacturing hub.

Sources: Humanoid Daily, Gasgoo, South China Morning Post

Foxconn: 29.7% Revenue Surge to $66.6 Billion as AI Servers Drive Record Quarter
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Foxconn: 29.7% Revenue Surge to $66.6 Billion as AI Servers Drive Record Quarter
6 APR 2026

Taiwan's Foxconn, the world's largest contract electronics manufacturer, posted first-quarter revenue of NT$2.13 trillion ($66.6 billion). That's a 29.7% jump year-on-year.

March alone: NT$803.7 billion, up 45.6% from a year earlier. A record for the month.

The Details

The growth engine is clear: cloud and networking products. Foxconn is Nvidia's primary server manufacturer, and demand for AI racks has been relentless. The AI server business now drives the company's trajectory more than its traditional role as Apple's largest iPhone assembler.

Smart consumer electronics, including iPhones, also posted "significant" growth from new product launches. But the AI division is where the momentum sits.

  • Q1 revenue: NT$2.13 trillion ($66.6 billion), +29.7% YoY
  • March revenue: NT$803.7 billion, +45.6% YoY (monthly record)
  • Growth driver: Cloud and networking (AI servers for Nvidia)
  • iPhone segment: "Significant" growth from new launches

Revenue slightly missed the NT$2.148 trillion SmartEstimate, but the trend is consistent.

Beyond assembly

Foxconn is expanding on multiple fronts. This week, it announced a tie-up with Mitsubishi Fuso to develop and export electric buses from Japan to Southeast Asia and Australia. The partnership pairs Foxconn's EV platform expertise with Fuso's Japanese manufacturing base, targeting markets where Chinese EV competitors are gaining ground fast.

Chairman Young Liu expects continued growth in Q2, particularly in AI racks. But he flagged the Middle East conflict as a "major challenge" for global supply chains and energy costs.

The stock puzzle

Despite the strong numbers, Foxconn shares have dropped 16% this year. Taiwan's broader market is up 12% over the same period. The gap reflects investor anxiety about geopolitical risk, not business fundamentals.

Full first-quarter earnings land May 14. The real number to watch: AI server margins, and whether the Mitsubishi Fuso deal signals a broader diversification push beyond electronics assembly.

Sources: Nikkei Asia, Bloomberg, Investing.com

Microsoft Storms Tokyo: $10 Billion to Build Japan's AI Backbone
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Microsoft Storms Tokyo: $10 Billion to Build Japan's AI Backbone
4 APR 2026

Brad Smith, Microsoft's Vice Chair, walked into PM Sanae Takaichi's office in Tokyo on Friday with a number that got the market's attention: $10 billion over four years for Japan's AI infrastructure.

Sakura Internet's stock jumped 20.2% within hours. SoftBank Corp. shares rose 1.6%.

The architecture

Microsoft will build data centers and expand cloud computing capacity across Japan, partnering with two domestic heavyweights. SoftBank Corp. provides AI computing resources and GPU clusters. Sakura Internet, a Japanese cloud provider, supplies locally hosted infrastructure.

The critical detail: all data stays in Japan. Azure customers will be able to use SoftBank's AI computing platform through a joint solution, processing everything on Japanese soil. That's deliberate. Takaichi's government is pushing data sovereignty as a national priority, earmarking $7.7 billion for advanced chips and AI development this fiscal year.

The talent push

Beyond hardware, Microsoft is teaming up with NTT Data, NEC, Fujitsu, and Hitachi to train 1 million AI engineers by 2030. Cybersecurity partnerships are part of the package, too.

Amazon and Google are both expanding their cloud footprint in Japan. Microsoft's play: lock in the infrastructure layer now, then sell Copilot and enterprise AI services on top of it.

Tokyo's bigger bet

Japan's government wants 30% of the global physical AI market by 2040, leveraging the country's industrial robotics lead. The Microsoft deal fits a pattern: attract foreign capital, keep data domestic, build the talent pipeline.

For Microsoft, Japan is the anchor of its Asia strategy. For Tokyo, it's a shot at building an AI ecosystem that doesn't depend entirely on chips and models from Washington or Shenzhen.

Sources: Bloomberg, Nikkei Asia, CNBC, Business Times Singapore

Galaxea AI: $291 Million Round Values Beijing Robotics Startup at $2.9 Billion
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Galaxea AI: $291 Million Round Values Beijing Robotics Startup at $2.9 Billion
4 APR 2026

Beijing-based Galaxea AI has closed a 2 billion yuan ($291 million) Series B+ round, pushing its valuation above 20 billion yuan ($2.9 billion). Nearly 20 investors participated.

The Details

Galaxea AI builds "embodied AI" systems: technology that lets machines perceive, reason and act in the physical world. Its core product is a Vision-Language-Action (VLA) model designed for manufacturing, logistics and commercial services.

Founded in 2023, the company's growth trajectory is steep.

  • Mid-2025: $100 million at a $700 million valuation
  • February 2026: $144 million raise
  • April 2026: $291 million at $2.9 billion

In barely twelve months, Galaxea's price tag has quadrupled.

Lens Technology (300433.SZ), the consumer electronics manufacturer known for supplying Apple's glass components, is among the investors. Lens also serves as Galaxea's hardware and mass production partner, a signal that commercialization is on the agenda, not just research. State-backed funds joined the round as well.

The concentration problem

China's robotics investment is narrowing. A handful of top-tier firms absorb most of the capital while smaller players struggle to raise. Publicly traded robotics stocks have pulled back this year, making private rounds like Galaxea's even more significant.

The company is now valued at roughly the same level Unitree was at its Hong Kong IPO last month. The difference: Unitree has shipped products to paying customers. Galaxea is still scaling from pilot deployments to mass production.

With nearly $500 million raised in total and Lens Technology handling hardware, the question is execution speed. China's embodied AI race has no shortage of funding. It has a shortage of products that work outside the lab.

Sources: DealStreet Asia, Caixin Global, Caproasia

TCL Takes Sony's Crown: $475 Million for the Bravia Empire
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TCL Takes Sony's Crown: $475 Million for the Bravia Empire
2 APR 2026

After months of negotiations, TCL Electronics and Sony have signed a binding agreement. TCL pays 75.4 billion yen ($475 million) for a 51% stake in a new joint venture that will run Sony's entire home entertainment business. The company, internally called "Bravia Inc.", is set to launch in April 2027.

What moves into the JV

The scope goes far beyond TVs. The joint venture takes over development, design, manufacturing, sales, logistics, and customer service for Sony's full home entertainment portfolio: Bravia televisions, professional displays, LED walls, projectors, and home theater systems. Globally.

Sony also transfers its Malaysian production subsidiary (Sony EMCS) to TCL outright. Negotiations continue over Sony's Chinese factory in Shanghai (SSVE), which could follow in part or in full.

Enterprise value of the included businesses: 102.8 billion yen ($645 million). Products will continue to carry the Sony and Bravia brand names under licensing agreements.

What changes for consumers

Nothing visible, at first. Bravia TVs keep their name, their design language, their retail presence. The shift happens behind the scenes: TCL brings manufacturing scale and cost discipline. Sony contributes IP, image processing technology, and brand prestige.

TCL shipped 30.7 million TVs last year, second globally behind Samsung at 35.3 million. Industry analysts expect TCL to challenge Samsung's top spot within two years of the JV going live.

The pattern

This is the second deal in weeks where a Chinese electronics company takes operational control of a Japanese brand's TV business. In February, Skyworth struck a similar arrangement with Panasonic for European markets. The model is the same: Japanese brand contributes technology and prestige, Chinese partner brings volume and global distribution infrastructure.

The consumer electronics map is being redrawn quietly. Samsung remains the last major non-Chinese volume player.

Sources: Yicai Global, Business Times Singapore, Bloomberg

UBTech's Humanoid Flip: Robot Revenue Jumps 23x to $119 Million
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UBTech's Humanoid Flip: Robot Revenue Jumps 23x to $119 Million
2 APR 2026

UBTech Robotics sold 1,079 full-size humanoid robots last year, generating $119.2 million in revenue from machines taller than 160 centimeters. In 2024, that number was $5.2 million.

The Details

Humanoid robots now account for 41% of UBTech's total revenue, up from a negligible share a year ago. The company calls it the "humanoid flip": for the first time, walking machines outsell everything else in its portfolio.

  • Total revenue: $290.5 million, +53% YoY
  • Net loss: narrowed 32% to $108 million
  • Gross margin: improved from 29% to 38%
  • Production capacity: 6,000+ full-size units annualized

The Walker S series, designed for industrial applications, was adopted across auto, electronics, and semiconductor manufacturing. Tasks include material handling, sorting, parts assembly, and quality inspection. UBTech claimed the "world's first mass delivery" of industrial humanoid robots in late 2025, shipping hundreds of Walker S2 units to partners.

Revenue from other segments tells a different story. Educational and logistics robots fell 17% to $91 million. Consumer hardware (lawn mowers, pool cleaners, vacuums) grew 6% to $72 million.

Unitree comparison

UBTech's 38% gross margin looks modest next to Unitree's reported 59.5% ahead of its IPO. The gap reflects different strategies: UBTech builds heavier, industrial-grade machines at higher cost. Unitree focuses on lighter, cheaper platforms with standardized components.

The margin math

Stock surged 17.1% to HK$100 on the results, though still well below the February peak of HK$156.40. The loss is narrowing, margins are expanding, and the revenue mix is shifting decisively toward the highest-growth segment.

At $108 million in annual losses, UBTech is still spending significantly more than it earns. At current trajectory, breakeven is at least two years out.

Sources: Yicai Global, Humanoid Daily, KrAsia

Trump Signals Iran Exit: Asian Markets Post Best Day in Months
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Trump Signals Iran Exit: Asian Markets Post Best Day in Months
1 APR 2026

The war in the Middle East may be entering its final chapter. U.S. President Donald Trump said Tuesday that American forces could leave Iran "in two or three weeks," adding: "There is no reason for us to do this." His comments triggered the sharpest rally across Asian markets since May.

The reaction

South Korea's KOSPI surged 4.88% within the first 15 minutes of trading, triggering a rare sidecar halt on program-driven buy orders. The Korean won jumped 21.6 points to 1,508.5 per dollar, snapping back from its lowest level since the 2009 financial crisis. Japan's Nikkei 225 gained 3.51%. Australia's ASX 200 rose 1.76%. Across Asia, nine stocks rose for every one that fell.

Overnight in the U.S., the Dow rallied 2.49%, the S&P 500 gained 2.91%, and the Nasdaq jumped 3.83%.

What Trump actually said

Trump stopped short of requiring a formal deal. "They don't have to make a deal with me," he said. But his condition was clear: Iran must be unable to develop nuclear weapons. He called the operation "a little detour" and described Iran's current leadership as "much more rational" than previous governments.

Separately, Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian told European Council President Antonio Costa that Tehran has the "necessary will" to end the war, provided guarantees against reignition.

What's at stake

The conflict, which began in late February with U.S.-Israeli strikes, has pushed oil above $100 per barrel and disrupted shipping through the Strait of Hormuz. Trump suggested the U.S. would not take responsibility for keeping the strait open, telling reporters that if "France or some other country wants to get oil," they should handle it themselves.

For Asia, the stakes are enormous. The region's largest economies depend on Middle Eastern energy imports, and the war has already hammered currencies, stoked inflation fears, and rattled supply chains from Seoul to Singapore.

Sources: CNBC, Yonhap, Straits Times, Korea Herald, Bloomberg

South Korea's $86 Billion March: Record Exports Defy Iran War
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South Korea's $86 Billion March: Record Exports Defy Iran War
1 APR 2026

South Korea's monthly exports smashed through the $80 billion mark for the first time ever in March, rising 48.3% year on year to $86.13 billion.

The Details

The engine: semiconductors. Chip exports spiked 151.4% to an all-time high of $32.83 billion, breaking the $30 billion barrier for the first time. Car exports rose 2.2% to $6.37 billion, driven by hybrid and EV demand. Petroleum product shipments surged 54.9% to $5.1 billion, lifted by war-driven oil price spikes.

By destination, China took $16.5 billion (+64%), the U.S. $16.34 billion (+47.1%), and ASEAN $13.75 billion (+34.3%). Only one market collapsed: Middle East exports plunged 49.1% to just $900 million.

Imports rose a modest 13.2% to $60.4 billion, leaving a trade surplus of $25.74 billion.

Context

These numbers landed in the middle of a war. Oil above $100, global shipping disrupted, the won at crisis-era lows.

The semiconductor supercycle is doing the heavy lifting: chip exports alone now account for 38% of total shipments.

Middle East trade has already cratered, and rising energy costs are eating into margins across Korean industry.

Sources: Yonhap, Bloomberg

Iran war as "game-changer": BYD doubles sales overnight
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Iran war as "game-changer": BYD doubles sales overnight
31 MAR 2026

While the world stares at the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, China's electric car industry is recording its biggest success in history.

What began as an energy crisis has developed within a few weeks into a "turbo moment" for brands like BYD, Geely, and VinFast.

The reason is simple: In Asia and the Pacific region, gasoline prices have risen so drastically that the switch to electricity is no longer just an ecological, but a naked economic necessity.

The "Hormuz shock" at the pump

Since around 80% of crude oil for the Asia-Pacific region flowed through the now-blocked Strait of Hormuz, a state of emergency prevails in many places:

  • Price jumps: In New Zealand, the gasoline price rose by 20% since early March to over 3 NZD per liter.

  • Panic buying: In China and the Philippines, miles-long lines formed; first gas stations began rationing.

  • Emergency measures: Laos reduced registration fees for e-cars by 30% and simultaneously increased them for combustion engines.

"What we used to sell in two weeks now goes out in one day."

A BYD dealer in Manila

Company

New objective / metric

Strategic impact

BYD

1.5 million export units (+15%)

Overseas sales exceeded domestic sales for the first time in February.

Geely

+150% export growth

Aggressive hybrid strategy in the US and Europe.

VinFast

Quadruple visitor numbers

Vietnam's national pride benefits massively from regional oil shock.

Leapmotor

150,000 units (export)

Stellantis partner sees oil volatility as "historic opportunity."

Analysts from Bloomberg and Macquarie agree: The Iran war could cement China's position as a green superpower. While the US under Donald Trump is dismantling subsidies for e-cars, China is filling the gap with affordable high technology.

All Details & Data: SCMP, Nikkei, Japan Times 

Rebellions: $400M Pre-IPO for South Korea's Nvidia Challenger
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Rebellions: $400M Pre-IPO for South Korea's Nvidia Challenger
31 MAR 2026

South Korean chip startup Rebellions has raised $400 million in a pre-IPO round, valuing the company at $2.34 billion. 

The round was led by Mirae Asset Financial Group and the Korea National Growth Fund, the South Korean government's investment vehicle.

  • Total fundraising: $850 million, with $650 million raised in the last six months alone.

The details

Rebellions was founded in 2020 and builds Neural Processing Units (NPUs) specifically for AI inference, meaning running AI models rather than training them. CEO Sunghyun Park names Meta and xAI as target customers, not hyperscalers like Amazon or Microsoft.

The flagship: The Rebel100 chip, which Rebellions claims offers "the best performance per dollar per watt" on the market.

The company also unveiled two new products:

  • RebelRack: a production-ready inference compute unit

  • RebelPOD: scalable clusters for large-scale AI deployments

The investor roster stands out: Samsung, SK Hynix, Arm and Saudi Aramco are all on board. Park says that thanks to Samsung and SK Hynix as backers, Rebellions has better access to scarce memory chips than other startups. Mirae Asset, the lead investor, is also invested in SpaceX.

K-Nvidia:

$165 million of the round came directly from the Korea National Growth Fund. It's the first direct investment under the "K-Nvidia" initiative, a joint program between the Financial Services Commission and the Ministry of Science and ICT.

  • The goal: build a globally competitive chip champion.

  • An IPO is on the agenda: Bloomberg reports JPMorgan has been mandated as lead underwriter, with a timeline of late 2026 or early 2027.

Context

The AI chip market is reshuffling fast: Nvidia acquired Groq in December for roughly $20 billion. Cerebras is valued at $22 billion and targeting a Q2 2026 IPO.

At $2.34 billion, Rebellions is playing in a different league, but it has one advantage neither Groq nor Cerebras had: a national government that has made its chip sector a top priority.

The inference bet is a smart one: while Nvidia dominates training with its GPUs, running AI models is becoming its own market with different demands around efficiency and cost. That's exactly where Rebellions is positioning itself.

Sources: CNBC, DealStreet Asia, TechCrunch

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