STOCK TITAN

/C O R R E C T I O N -- Standard Bots/

Rhea-AI Impact
(Low)
Rhea-AI Sentiment
(Neutral)
Tags

Standard Bots, which describes itself as America's largest maker of AI-native industrial robots, raised $200 million Series C at a $1 billion valuation led by RoboStrategy (Nasdaq: BOT) and existing investors including General Catalyst.

The company is expanding its Glen Cove, New York facility to 70,000 square feet, vertically integrating U.S. manufacturing and aiming to deliver 10% of new U.S. industrial robot deployments by next year. Standard Bots builds no-code AI robot arms and industrial humanoids for major manufacturers and SMBs, and advises U.S. policymakers on a National Robotics Strategy.

Loading...
Loading translation...

AI-generated analysis. How Rhea-AI works. Not financial advice.

Positive

  • $200 million Series C funding at $1 billion valuation
  • Expansion of Glen Cove facility to 70,000 square feet
  • Goal to deliver 10% of new U.S. industrial robot deployments
  • Vertically integrated, American-made AI-native industrial robots
  • Customer base spanning Fortune 100 and hundreds of SMB manufacturers

Negative

  • None.

News Market Reaction – BOT

-1.56%
26 alerts
-1.56% News Effect
+8.0% Peak Tracked
-22.9% Trough Tracked
-$16M Valuation Impact
$985.12M Market Cap
0.8x Rel. Volume

On the day this news was published, BOT declined 1.56%, reflecting a mild negative market reaction. Argus tracked a peak move of +8.0% during that session. Argus tracked a trough of -22.9% from its starting point during tracking. Our momentum scanner triggered 26 alerts that day, indicating elevated trading interest and price volatility. This price movement removed approximately $16M from the company's valuation, bringing the market cap to $985.12M at that time.

Data tracked by StockTitan Argus on the day of publication.

See more from StockTitan in Google Search and AI answers. Adds StockTitan as a preferred source · opens Google
Add on Google

In the news release, Standard Bots Raises $200 Million Series C at $1 Billion Valuation to Scale American-Made, AI-Native Industrial Robots, issued 09-Jun-2026 by Standard Bots over PR Newswire, we are advised by the company that changes have been made to the release. The complete, corrected release follows:

Standard Bots Raises $200 Million Series C at $1 Billion Valuation to Scale American-Made, AI-Native Industrial Robots

Standard Bots is on pace to deliver 10% of new U.S. industrial robot deployments by next year

NEW YORK, June 9, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- Standard Bots, America's largest manufacturer of AI-native, industrial robotics, today announced a $200 million Series C led by RoboStrategy and existing investors including General Catalyst at a $1 billion valuation, marking a major milestone for American robotics at a time when U.S. industry is racing to modernize. The company is also expanding its manufacturing footprint in New York, increasing its ability to design, assemble, and deploy American-made robots at scale for customers ranging from Fortune 100 companies to hundreds of SMB manufacturers across the country. Standard Bots was co-founded by Evan Beard, David Golden, and James Cordle.

Standard Bots logo

This expansion comes at a pivotal moment for U.S. manufacturing. Roughly a third of the U.S. economy and a third of American jobs are accounted for by this sector when affiliated suppliers and services are included. For every one manufacturing worker, another five jobs are supported elsewhere in the economy. Manufacturing is how millions of people in this country build a good life.

But for decades, America has shed manufacturing jobs and as a result hollowed out its middle class. We've gone from 20 million manufacturing workers in 1979 to only 13 million today. This is because United States manufacturing is no longer competitive globally. Sourcing from China and other parts of the world is generally 5 to 10 times cheaper. And it's not just because of lower labor costs – it's because of China's national investment in robotics. Last year, China installed nine times more industrial robots than America, and more than the rest of the world combined.

Standard Bots has deployed AI-native, industrial robots to hundreds of American companies in nearly every state – from generational small businesses in the heartland to some of the country's largest manufacturers in oil and gas, automotive, aerospace, and data centers. What they all share is this – and the research shows this – manufacturers become more competitive when they put robots to work. And competitiveness is the key that unlocks company growth, job growth, and wage growth.

Against this backdrop, Standard Bots is expanding its Glen Cove, New York facility to 70,000 square feet to scale its vertically integrated production process amidst rapid growth in demand, and is on pace to deliver 10% of new U.S. industrial robot deployments by next year.

Standard Bots is founded on a simple idea: the biggest opportunity in automation is the massive amount of essential work that robots still can't do. Its robots are designed to be taught through demonstration and observation rather than traditional coding, making advanced automation more accessible across a broader range of industrial tasks and environments, including customers like Sunoco, Lockheed Martin, Amazon, NASA, the U.S. Army, and hundreds of SMB manufacturers.

"AI-native robots are the essential power tool of the 21st century – the tool that will grow American manufacturing and help every worker to be a force at work," said Evan Beard, co-founder, CEO, and Chief Engineer of Standard Bots. "AI will allow industrial robots to do 100x more tasks with full autonomy. You just show your robot how it's done, and it learns through demonstration. The quickest way to get to full autonomy is through deployments, collecting real-world data, and iterating as fast as possible. Standard Bots is the furthest along in that regard with the most vertically integrated, onshore production process, and this new capital just accelerates all of that."

Standard Bots makes AI-native robot arms and industrial humanoids that require no code to program for fast deployment and ease of maintenance across a range of applications including machining, welding, palletizing, grinding, fastening, dispensing, assembly, inspection, and more – all at a lower price point than legacy manufacturers. Standard Bots designs almost all its own parts, including its own actuators, assembles every final product in-house, and by 2027, plans to manufacture everything – from metal in to robots out – right here in America.

Standard Bots is a leading advisor to the White House and Congress on a National Robotics Strategy, including testimony before the Joint Economic Committee and the Subcommittee on Research and Technology. Key policy recommendations include financial support for American manufacturers to invest in robotics, and a ban on Chinese-made industrial robots and robotics components.

"Across our portfolio, we're seeing a clear shift from experimental robotics to systems that can deliver immediate, real-world value," said Andrew Kang, CEO at RoboStrategy (Nasdaq: BOT), an actively managed closed-end fund focused on robotics. "Standard Bots stands out because they've solved one of the hardest problems in industrial automation: making robots that are not only powerful, but actually usable on the factory floor without specialized programming. Their approach to physical AI—teaching robots through demonstration—dramatically expands the range of tasks that can be automated. Combined with their commitment to building and scaling manufacturing in the U.S., we believe Standard Bots is uniquely positioned to define the next generation of industrial robotics."

"The democratization of robotics is no longer a slogan; it's happening on factory floors across America," said Max Rimpel, Partner at General Catalyst. "For years, robotics' potential to bring manufacturing back home has been held back by cost and complexity. Evan and the Standard Bots team are helping remove those barriers, giving manufacturers of all sizes access to automation that was once out of reach. We believe they'll be instrumental in building the next generation of American manufacturing."

"Standard Bots is a critical enabler of American industrial capacity," said Samir Parikh, Managing Partner at GiantLeap Capital. "Its combination of AI-native robotics, domestic manufacturing, and execution at scale positions it to become one of the defining companies of the next generation."

Needham & Company, Bal Strategic Partners and Optimal PCA served as strategic advisors for the transaction.

About Standard Bots
Standard Bots is America's largest manufacturer of AI-native industrial robots, trusted by hundreds of customers, from large enterprises like Sunoco, Amazon, Lockheed Martin, NASA, and the U.S. Army to hundreds of SMB manufacturers across nearly every state. The robots are taught through demonstration – not code – enabling fast deployment and easy operation across machining, welding, palletizing, assembly, inspection, and more, at a 30% lower price point than legacy manufacturers. Standard Bots also serves as a leading advisor to the White House and has testified twice to Congress on America's National Robotics Strategy. Headquartered in Glen Cove, New York, Standard Bots is backed by General Catalyst, RoboStrategy, Amazon, Samsung Next, Box Group, and GiantLeap Capital.

Media Contact: press@standardbots.com

Correction: The sentence above the boiler plate has been updated to " Needham & Company, Bal Strategic Partners and Optimal PCA served as strategic advisors for the transaction."

Cision View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/standard-bots-raises-200-million-series-c-at-1-billion-valuation-to-scale-american-made-ai-native-industrial-robots-302795268.html

SOURCE Standard Bots

FAQ

How much did Standard Bots raise in its June 2026 Series C round?

Standard Bots raised $200 million in a Series C round at a $1 billion valuation. According to Standard Bots, the funding was led by RoboStrategy with participation from existing investors including General Catalyst, supporting expansion of U.S.-based AI-native industrial robot manufacturing capacity.

What valuation did Standard Bots achieve in its $200 million Series C funding?

The Series C funding valued Standard Bots at $1 billion, marking a key milestone for the company. According to Standard Bots, this valuation reflects investor confidence in its AI-native industrial robots and vertically integrated U.S. manufacturing strategy for major manufacturers and small and mid-sized businesses.

How is Standard Bots expanding its manufacturing facility in Glen Cove, New York?

Standard Bots is expanding its Glen Cove, New York facility to 70,000 square feet. According to Standard Bots, this enlarged site will scale its vertically integrated process to design, assemble and deploy American-made industrial robots in response to rapid demand growth across U.S. manufacturing customers.

What does Standard Bots aim to achieve in U.S. industrial robot deployments by next year?

Standard Bots is on pace to deliver 10% of new U.S. industrial robot deployments by next year. According to Standard Bots, this target leverages its AI-native, no-code robots and expanded New York manufacturing to serve customers from Fortune 100 firms to hundreds of SMB manufacturers nationwide.

Which industries and customers are using Standard Bots' AI-native industrial robots?

Standard Bots supplies AI-native robots to U.S. companies across oil and gas, automotive, aerospace and data centers. According to Standard Bots, customers include Sunoco, Lockheed Martin, Amazon, NASA, the U.S. Army and hundreds of small and mid-sized manufacturers in nearly every state.

What role does RoboStrategy (Nasdaq: BOT) play in Standard Bots' 2026 funding?

RoboStrategy (Nasdaq: BOT) led Standard Bots' $200 million Series C round. According to RoboStrategy, it views Standard Bots as having solved a key challenge in industrial automation: making powerful robots usable on factory floors without specialized programming, via demonstration-based physical AI.

How do Standard Bots' AI-native robots differ from traditional industrial robots?

Standard Bots designs AI-native robot arms and industrial humanoids that require no code to program. According to Standard Bots, robots learn tasks through demonstration and observation, enabling faster deployment across machining, welding, palletizing, grinding, fastening, dispensing, assembly, inspection and other industrial applications at lower price points than many legacy systems.