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Unitree Robotics changes to joint stock limited company, fanning IPO speculation


China’s top humanoid robot start-up Unitree Robotics has converted into a company limited by shares, a move that has fanned speculation around its public listing plans, as Chinese robotics firms rapidly expand amid the country’s fervour for the artificial intelligence (AI)-enabled machines.

Unitree has changed from a limited liability company into a joint stock limited company, an equivalent to a company limited by shares, according to records on Chinese corporate database Qichacha published on Thursday.

In a letter to business partners, the company said the move was “due to company development needs”, according to a report by the state-run Chinese news outlet Securities Times.

A robot dog from Unitree is seen at Zhejiang Overseas Talent Innovation Park in Hangzhou, China, April 23, 2025. Photo: Dickson Lee
A robot dog from Unitree is seen at Zhejiang Overseas Talent Innovation Park in Hangzhou, China, April 23, 2025. Photo: Dickson Lee

A joint stock limited structure lets a company issue and transfer shares, allowing it to raise more capital as it scales up its operations. Chinese media outlets have called Unitree’s restructuring a move that paved the way for its initial public offering.

Hangzhou-based Unitree did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

During Hong Kong chief executive John Lee Ka-chiu’s visit to Hangzhou in April, Unitree founder and CEO Wang Xingxing reportedly told him that a listing in Hong Kong was a possibility.

Unitree is considered one of China’s most advanced robot manufacturers. Its main commercial products include a US$16,000 humanoid robot named G1, and robot dogs, with the latter helping the company achieve profitability in 2020, marketing director Huang Jiawei told the Post in March.



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