For a future home humanoid, the factory behind the robot may matter as much as the robot itself. Precision parts, sensors, motors, thermal systems, and high-volume manufacturing could decide which companies can scale beyond demos.
The Next Web reports that two major Apple suppliers, Luxshare Precision and Lingyi iTech, are pursuing Hong Kong capital as they expand beyond smartphone components into AI hardware and humanoid robots. Luxshare is reportedly exploring a Hong Kong listing that could raise about $3 billion, while Lingyi iTech has raised about $1.1 billion.
The home-robot angle is indirect but important. These companies are not launching consumer humanoids for households. They are part of the manufacturing supply chain that could make humanoid robots cheaper, more scalable, and more reliable over time.
The takeaway for Humanoid Home News readers: the humanoid robot race is not only about robotics startups. It is also about the large electronics suppliers that already know how to manufacture complex hardware at scale.
Source: The Next Web
Published: June 25, 2026
