Hyundai Shares Surge As Robotics Push Takes Shape
By Reuters | 11 Feb, 2026
The deployment of Boston Dynamics robot dogs at a UK nuclear power plant and the resignation of its CEO spurred a 6% jump in Hyundai Motors shares.
Robert Playter, chief executive of Hyundai Motor Group's robot affiliate Boston Dynamics is stepping down, the Waltham, Massachusetts-based company said on its X account.
Shares of Hyundai Motor rallied 5.9% in Seoul trading on Wednesday as the leadership change spurred market expectation that the automaker intends to accelerate commercialisation of its robot business.
"The stock appeared to have risen because of the news about the resignation of the CEO," said James Hong, Seoul-based analyst at Macquarie, adding that Playter's team had been "R&D-oriented" for robot development.
A media report that Boston Dynamics' robot dogs have been deployed to work at a nuclear power plant in Britain also contributed to the stock's gains, a note from Seoul-based Daishin Securities said.
Hyundai Motor Group, which controls Hyundai and Kia, acquired Boston Dynamics in 2021 with a majority stake.
In January, Hyundai said it plans to deploy humanoid robots made by Boston Dynamics at its U.S. manufacturing plant in Georgia.
Kia's shares gained 4.6%.
(Reporting by Heejin Kim and Jihoon LeeEditing by Ed Davies)
Recent Articles
- US, Iran Float Another Ceasefire Deal Framework After Latest Exchange of Fire
- How and When Flying Cars Will Change American Life
- China to Build AI Token Futures Market in Race with US
- US Weekly Jobless Claims Increase Slightly Amid Low Layoffs
- US PCE Inflation Shot Up in April
- BYD Steps up Push of 'God's Eye' Assisted Driving System
- Costlier Flights, Hotels Make Summer Travel K-Shaped
- ByteDance Developing Custom CPU Chips to Support Agentic AI Rollout
- IBM to Invest $10 Billion for Large-Scale Quantum Computer by 2029
- Small Biotech Firms Quicker to Adopt AI Than Big Ones
