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NVIDIA Announces Halos for Robotics, the Industry’s First Full-Stack Safety System for Physical AI

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NVIDIA (NVDA) introduced Halos for Robotics, described as the industry’s first full-stack safety system for robotics and physical AI, announced June 22, 2026 at Automate in Chicago.

The platform integrates NVIDIA IGX Thor, Holoscan Sensor Bridge, Halos OS and an ANAB-accredited AI Systems Inspection Lab, with Agility adopting key components for its Digit humanoid in industrial settings.

An ecosystem of software, embedded, sensor and certification partners supports development, inspection and certification, with Halos Core for IGX and the open-source Outside-In Safety Blueprint available in early access.

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AI-generated analysis. Not financial advice.

Positive

  • Launch of Halos for Robotics as a unified full-stack safety architecture for physical AI
  • 18,600+ engineering years of autonomous vehicle safety experience leveraged for robotics
  • ANAB accreditation of the NVIDIA Halos AI Systems Inspection Lab for functional and AI safety
  • Agility adopting IGX Thor and Halos Core for safety in its Digit humanoid robot
  • Broad ecosystem of partners across software, embedded systems, sensors and certification bodies
  • Early access availability of Halos Core for IGX and the open-source Outside-In Safety Blueprint

Negative

  • Halos Core for NVIDIA IGX currently limited to early access for registered developers

Key Figures

Senior notes offering: $25,000,000,000 Net proceeds: $24.9 billion Max coupon rate: 5.625% +5 more
8 metrics
Senior notes offering $25,000,000,000 Total multi-tranche senior unsecured notes from 424B5 filing
Net proceeds $24.9 billion Estimated net proceeds from June 2026 senior notes offering
Max coupon rate 5.625% Highest coupon on senior notes maturing through 2056
CEO share gift 400,000 shares Bona fide gift by Jen-Hsun & Lori Huang Living Trust to charities
Indirect holdings 468,131,547 shares Trust-related indirect ownership reported for Jen-Hsun Huang
Direct holdings 70,191,975 shares Direct NVIDIA share ownership reported for Jen-Hsun Huang
Insider sale size 1,000,000 shares Open‑market sales by Mark A. Stevens–related trusts on June 2 and 4, 2026
RSU grants 59,509 RSUs Stock-based awards to Principal Accounting Officer Scott Gawel on June 8, 2026

Peers on Argus

NVDA was up about 3% with above-average volume, while the momentum scanner flagg...
1 Up

NVDA was up about 3% with above-average volume, while the momentum scanner flagged only MU moving higher. Several key peers (AVGO, TSM, AMD, NXPI) were also positive, but scanner breadth was limited, pointing to a more stock-specific move.

Common Catalyst AI infrastructure and physical AI remain central, with NVDA’s robotics safety platform and MU’s AI agreement both highlighting continued investment in AI-focused hardware and platforms.

Previous AI Reports

5 past events · Latest: Jun 11 (Positive)
Same Type Pattern 5 events
Date Event Sentiment Move Catalyst
Jun 11 Helix AI platform Positive +2.2% Launch of KKR-backed Helix AI infrastructure platform including NVIDIA as founding partner.
Jun 07 Korea AI cloud Positive +1.6% Plan for gigawatt-scale AI cloud in Korea built on NVIDIA DSX architecture.
Jun 01 TSMC fab AI Positive +6.3% TSMC deploying NVIDIA accelerated computing and AI across semiconductor design and manufacturing.
Jun 01 Healthy Taiwan AI Positive +6.3% Agentic and physical AI deployment in Taiwan healthcare backed by regional investment.
Jun 01 Physical AI tools Positive +6.3% Release of open source physical AI agent tools and skills via NVIDIA Agent Toolkit.
Pattern Detected

AI-focused announcements have recently coincided with consistently positive price reactions for NVDA.

Historical Comparison

+4.5% avg move · In recent AI-tagged announcements, NVDA averaged a 4.52% move with consistently positive reactions. ...
AI
+4.5%
Average Historical Move AI

In recent AI-tagged announcements, NVDA averaged a 4.52% move with consistently positive reactions. This robotics safety launch extends that pattern of major AI ecosystem initiatives across infrastructure and physical AI.

Same-tag history shows NVDA progressing from AI tools and healthcare robots to fabs and national clouds; Halos for Robotics advances this trajectory toward standardized safety for industrial physical AI deployments.

Regulatory & Risk Context

Short Interest: 1.24%
Short Interest
1.24% of float
0% 15% 30%+
low as of 2026-05-29 Days to cover: 1.58

Reported short interest appears relatively low, suggesting limited short-squeeze potential and typically reducing the likelihood of extreme volatility driven purely by short covering.

Market Pulse Summary

This announcement extends NVIDIA’s physical AI ecosystem with a full-stack robotics safety platform,...
Analysis

This announcement extends NVIDIA’s physical AI ecosystem with a full-stack robotics safety platform, building on prior AI infrastructure deals that averaged 4.52% moves. Investors may watch how industrial adoption, new debt and recent insider selling evolve from here.

Key Terms

physical ai, ansi national accreditation board, iec 61508, rule 10b5-1 trading plan, +1 more
5 terms
physical ai technical
"the industry’s first full-stack safety system for robotics and physical AI that unifies AI compute"
Physical AI combines artificial intelligence with physical devices or environments, enabling machines to interact with and adapt to the real world in a human-like way. It matters to investors because it can lead to smarter robots, autonomous vehicles, or advanced sensors that improve efficiency and open new markets, potentially creating significant business opportunities and competitive advantages.
ansi national accreditation board regulatory
"The NVIDIA Halos AI Systems Inspection Lab is the world’s first ANSI National Accreditation Board (ANAB)-accredited program"
An ANSI National Accreditation Board (ANAB) accreditation is an independent seal of approval for organizations that test, inspect or certify products and systems, confirming they follow recognized technical standards and operate reliably. For investors, ANAB accreditation is like a trusted inspector certifying the inspectors: it reduces business and regulatory risk by increasing confidence that products, safety systems or management processes meet accepted requirements and will be accepted by customers and regulators.
iec 61508 regulatory
"meet rigorous standards such as IEC 61508, ISO 13849 and ISO/IEC TR 5469 before final third-party certification"
IEC 61508 is an international safety standard that sets rules for designing and testing electronic control systems so they continue to behave safely when parts fail; think of it as a blueprint for making airbag- or seatbelt‑level protections inside machines and software. For investors, compliance signals lower regulatory and legal risk, can be required to sell into certain industries, and often means higher upfront engineering costs but reduced chance of costly recalls or shutdowns later.
rule 10b5-1 trading plan regulatory
"The transaction was executed under a pre-arranged Rule 10b5-1 trading plan adopted by Dabiri"
A Rule 10b5-1 trading plan is a pre-arranged schedule that allows company insiders to buy or sell stock at specific times, even if they have inside information. It helps prevent accusations of unfair trading by making these transactions look planned and transparent, rather than sneaky or illegal.
senior unsecured notes financial
"is offering multiple series of senior unsecured notes totaling $25,000,000,000 in a multi‑tranche debt sale"
Senior unsecured notes are a type of loan a company borrows from investors, promising to pay back with interest. They are called "unsecured" because they aren’t backed by specific assets like buildings or equipment, but "senior" because they are paid back before other debts if the company gets into trouble. Investors see them as a relatively safer way for companies to raise money.

AI-generated analysis. Not financial advice.

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News Summary:

  • NVIDIA Halos for Robotics is the industry’s only full-stack, open robotics safety system, extending NVIDIA Halos’ proven autonomous vehicle safety to robotics and physical AI to give machines that sense, decide and act in the real world a single common safety architecture.
  • Safety is built in every layer, with NVIDIA IGX Thor and Holoscan Sensor Bridge for AI compute and sensor connectivity, the Halos OS software stack for safety functions and applications, and the NVIDIA Halos AI Systems Inspection Lab to help partners prepare for third-party certification with confidence.
  • Humanoid robotics and physical AI innovator Agility is the first company to team with NVIDIA to incorporate elements of Halos for Robotics into its proprietary safety system, bringing a new standard of responsible automation to factories, warehouses and logistics operations.

CHICAGO, June 22, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Automate -- NVIDIA today announced NVIDIA Halos for Robotics, the industry’s first full-stack, comprehensive safety system for robotics and physical AI that unifies AI compute and safety.

Agility, a leading humanoid robotics and physical AI company, is the first to use NVIDIA Halos for Robotics to build safety into its humanoids working in factories, warehouses and logistics operations for customers including Amazon, GXO, Schaeffler and Toyota Motor Manufacturing Canada.

The next generation of autonomous robots will operate in dynamic environments alongside humans, using AI foundation models, accelerated compute and distributed sensors. Scaling these systems requires a full-stack safety architecture.

NVIDIA Halos enables companies to rely on a standardized, unified safety architecture that connects AI compute, system software, sensor data, safety applications and inspection for robotic systems.

“Physical AI is transforming how factories, warehouses and logistics operations work, and robotics teams need a unified safety architecture to scale autonomous systems into these environments,” said Deepu Talla, vice president of robotics and edge AI at NVIDIA. “With NVIDIA Halos for Robotics, developers and system builders can harness NVIDIA’s proven autonomous vehicle safety foundation to develop safer robots faster and bring them into industrial operations alongside workers with greater confidence.”

A Full-Stack Foundation for Robot Safety
Drawing on 18,600+ engineering years of autonomous vehicle safety development, NVIDIA Halos for Robotics provides developers with a common safety architecture for building, validating and deploying physical AI systems.

The system spans the key layers needed for robot safety:

  • NVIDIA IGX Thor™ and NVIDIA Holoscan Sensor Bridge provide industrial-grade AI compute, built-in safety and sensor connectivity for real-time robotics and safety workloads.
  • NVIDIA Halos OS provides the software stack for robotics safety, including Halos Core to support safety-related operating functions and safety applications built with the NVIDIA Halos Outside-In Safety Blueprint, which extends robot perception using external cameras and AI agents to dynamically control robot behavior in industrial settings.
  • The NVIDIA Halos AI Systems Inspection Lab is the world’s first ANSI National Accreditation Board (ANAB)-accredited program for functional and AI safety for physical AI, helping partners prepare Halos integrations for third-party certification by leading certification bodies including TÜV Rheinland, UL Solutions, TÜV SÜD, exida, SGS and CertX.

“As AI-enabled robotics moves into industrial environments, the industry needs standardized, internationally recognized frameworks to assess safety across increasingly complex systems,” said Laurie E. Locascio, president and CEO of ANSI. “ANAB’s accreditation of the NVIDIA Halos AI Systems Inspection Lab confirms the program has the competence and impartiality to evaluate robotic AI systems against recognized safety requirements, giving companies a rigorous and internationally recognized foundation for their path to certification.”

Agility Incorporates Halos for Industrial Humanoids
Humanoid robots are designed to operate in dynamic environments alongside workers, equipment and other robots that are constantly in motion. That requires safety engineered for every layer of the stack.

Agility is extending its leadership in humanoid safety by teaming with NVIDIA to integrate NVIDIA IGX Thor and Halos Core into its proprietary safe human detection system for its humanoid robot Digit, which is designed for industrial work in logistics, manufacturing and warehouse operations. For Digit, NVIDIA IGX Thor delivers industrial-grade AI compute with built-in safety capabilities, while Halos Core supports the software layer for safety-related operating functions.

Agility will also participate in the NVIDIA Halos AI Systems Inspection Lab. Together, Agility and NVIDIA will use the lab to ensure Digit’s safety-related software, AI components and cybersecurity protections meet rigorous standards such as IEC 61508, ISO 13849 and ISO/IEC TR 5469 before final third-party certification.

“For humanoids to deliver value at scale, safety has to be built into the robot and validated across the entire system,” said Peggy Johnson, CEO of Agility. “Partnering with NVIDIA to implement and optimize the Halos for Robotics system extends our leadership in responsible automation, which is a nonnegotiable requirement for bringing humanoids safely into industrial workflows. This collaboration unlocks true human-robot teamwork, driving the long-term returns that will power next-generation manufacturing and logistics operations.”

A Robotics Safety Ecosystem Built for Scale
The NVIDIA Halos for Robotics ecosystem brings together partners across software, systems, sensors and silicon, industrial applications and certification bodies to support safety from development through deployment:

  • Software: Acontis, FreeRTOS and QNX support the real-time operating environment, safety communications and embedded software layers needed for functional safety development.
  • Embedded systems: Advantech and NexCobot deliver safety-designed NVIDIA IGX-based systems for robotics deployments.
  • Sensors and silicon: Infineon, NXP Semiconductor, STMicroelectronics and Texas Instruments contribute sensor, safety microcontroller and other semiconductor technologies.
  • Industrial applications: FORT Robotics, Inventec, KION Group, Lyte AI and Neurealm are developing functional safety agents using the NVIDIA Halos Outside-In Safety Blueprint.
  • Assessment Agencies: TÜV Rheinland is inspecting NVIDIA IGX Thor, Halos OS and Holoscan Sensor Bridge for functional safety certification readiness, building on TÜV SÜD’s inspection of Thor SoC and Halos Core for ISO 26262.

The NVIDIA Halos AI Systems Inspection Lab includes more than 40 companies across manufacturers, certification bodies and safety vendors working to move safe physical AI systems from design to real-world deployment. TÜV Rheinland, TÜV SÜD, UL Solutions, exida, SGS and CertX all recognize the NVIDIA Halos AI Systems Inspection Lab as part of their certification process.

Availability
NVIDIA Halos Core for NVIDIA IGX™ is available in early access for registered developers in Linux and Linux plus QNX OS for Safety 8.0 configurations. The open source NVIDIA Halos Outside-In Safety Blueprint, part of the Halos Applications layer of Halos OS, is now available in early access on GitHub.

Learn more about NVIDIA Halos for Robotics in this technical blog and webpage.

About NVIDIA
NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) is the world leader in AI and accelerated computing.

For further information, contact:
Quentin Nolibois
Corporate Communications
NVIDIA Corporation
press@nvidia.com

Certain statements in this press release including, but not limited to, statements as to: physical AI transforming how factories, warehouses and logistics operations work; expectations with respect to growth, performance, availability, and benefits of NVIDIA’s products, services and technologies, and related trends and drivers; expectations with respect to NVIDIA’s third party arrangements, including with its collaborators and partners; expectations with respect to technology developments, and related trends and drivers; projected market growth and trends; expectations with respect to AI and related industries; and other statements that are not historical facts are forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, which are subject to the “safe harbor” created by those sections based on management’s beliefs and assumptions and on information currently available to management and are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause results to be materially different than expectations. Important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially include: global economic and political conditions; NVIDIA’s reliance on third parties to manufacture, assemble, package and test NVIDIA’s products; the impact of technological development and competition; development of new products and technologies or enhancements to NVIDIA’s existing product and technologies; market acceptance of NVIDIA’s products or NVIDIA’s partners’ products; design, manufacturing or software defects; changes in consumer preferences or demands; changes in industry standards and interfaces; unexpected loss of performance of NVIDIA’s products or technologies when integrated into systems; and changes in applicable laws and regulations, as well as other factors detailed from time to time in the most recent reports NVIDIA files with the Securities and Exchange Commission, or SEC, including, but not limited to, its annual report on Form 10-K and quarterly reports on Form 10-Q. Copies of reports filed with the SEC are posted on the company’s website and are available from NVIDIA without charge. These forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and speak only as of the date hereof, and, except as required by law, NVIDIA disclaims any obligation to update these forward-looking statements to reflect future events or circumstances.

Many of the products and features described herein remain in various stages and will be offered on a when-and-if-available basis. The statements above are not intended to be, and should not be interpreted as a commitment, promise, or legal obligation, and the development, release, and timing of any features or functionalities described for our products is subject to change and remains at the sole discretion of NVIDIA. NVIDIA will have no liability for failure to deliver or delay in the delivery of any of the products, features or functions set forth herein.

© 2026 NVIDIA Corporation. All rights reserved. NVIDIA, the NVIDIA logo, NVIDIA IGX and NVIDIA IGX Thor are trademarks and/or registered trademarks of NVIDIA Corporation in the U.S. and other countries. Other company and product names may be trademarks of the respective companies with which they are associated. Features, pricing, availability and specifications are subject to change without notice.

A photo accompanying this announcement is available at:
https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/f146c467-95a9-4f44-855e-88cdeff4dee8


FAQ

What is NVIDIA Halos for Robotics (NVDA) and how does it improve robot safety?

NVIDIA Halos for Robotics is a full-stack safety system unifying AI compute, software, sensors and inspection for physical AI. According to NVIDIA, it provides a common architecture to build, validate and deploy autonomous robots operating alongside humans in factories, warehouses and logistics.

How is Agility using NVIDIA Halos for Robotics with its Digit humanoid robot?

Agility is integrating NVIDIA IGX Thor and Halos Core into its proprietary safe human detection system for Digit. According to Agility, this supports safety-related operating functions for Digit’s industrial work in logistics, manufacturing and warehouse environments, and will be validated via the Halos AI Systems Inspection Lab.

What role does the NVIDIA Halos AI Systems Inspection Lab play in NVDA’s robotics safety stack?

The NVIDIA Halos AI Systems Inspection Lab evaluates functional and AI safety for physical AI systems. According to NVIDIA, it is ANAB-accredited and helps partners prepare Halos integrations for third-party certification by bodies such as TÜV Rheinland, UL Solutions, TÜV SÜD, exida, SGS and CertX.

Which companies are part of the NVIDIA Halos for Robotics ecosystem with NVDA?

The Halos ecosystem spans software, embedded, sensor and industrial partners, plus assessors. According to NVIDIA, contributors include Acontis, FreeRTOS, QNX, Advantech, NexCobot, Infineon, NXP Semiconductor, STMicroelectronics, Texas Instruments, FORT Robotics, KION Group and multiple TÜV and certification organizations.

When is NVIDIA Halos Core for IGX available to NVDA robotics developers?

NVIDIA Halos Core for NVIDIA IGX is available in early access for registered developers. According to NVIDIA, it supports Linux and Linux plus QNX OS for Safety 8.0 configurations, enabling safety-related operating functions for robotics and physical AI deployments.

What is the NVIDIA Halos Outside-In Safety Blueprint and where can NVDA users access it?

The Halos Outside-In Safety Blueprint is an open-source framework for extending robot perception using external cameras and AI agents. According to NVIDIA, it is part of the Halos Applications layer of Halos OS and is available in early access on GitHub.

Which safety standards are targeted by NVIDIA Halos for Robotics and Agility’s Digit robot?

NVIDIA and Agility are working to align Digit’s safety software, AI and cybersecurity with key standards. According to Agility, the collaboration targets rigorous requirements such as IEC 61508, ISO 13849 and ISO/IEC TR 5469 before undergoing final third-party certification.