Gasgoo Munich- On June 24, SEER Robotics officially listed on the Main Board of the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, earning the title of the market's first "robot brain" stock.
Founded in 2020, the company completed the journey from startup to public listing in just six years. On its debut, SEER Robotics shares rallied, touching an intraday high of 140.5 Hong Kong dollars and giving it an IPO valuation of 11.227 billion Hong Kong dollars.
As the robotics industry accelerates its shift from hardware-driven to software-defined models, SEER Robotics' debut offers the market a fresh case study on this evolving track.
5,934x Subscription and 22x Price-to-Sales: What Is the Market Betting On?
SEER Robotics' IPO has drawn extraordinary attention from capital markets.
The company offered 10.4973 million shares globally at 101.6 Hong Kong dollars apiece before the greenshoe option. That puts the offering size at 1.067 billion Hong Kong dollars pre-greenshoe, rising to 1.226 billion assuming full exercise.
According to the results, the retail tranche was subscribed 5,934.56 times, while the institutional tranche saw 21.29 times coverage. Such multiples are exceptionally rare for Hong Kong IPOs in recent years.
Its lineup of cornerstone investors is equally striking.
Eight cornerstone investors snapped up 43.34% of the offering, worth 462 million Hong Kong dollars. Hillhouse's HHLRA led the charge with 118 million, joined by prominent names like Yuanbao, 3W, and GF Fund Management.

Image Source: SEER Robotics
Hillhouse's participation is particularly telling. Known for its long-term philosophy, the firm has deep roots in robotics. Its bet on SEER Robotics signals top-tier capital's endorsement of the "robot brain" niche.
Yet, a tension lurks between that 5,934-times retail frenzy and a price-to-sales ratio of 22 times.
The latest prospectus shows revenue climbing to 249 million yuan in 2023, 339 million in 2024, and 442 million in 2025. Gross profit followed a similar trajectory—hitting 122 million, 156 million, and 209 million, respectively—while margins held steady at 49.2%, 45.9%, and 47.4%.
The company remains in the red, with annual losses of 47.7 million, 42.31 million, and 47.07 million yuan. However, on a non-IFRS adjusted basis, losses narrowed significantly to 20.91 million, 10.63 million, and 2.87 million.
SEER Robotics expects to remain unprofitable through 2026.
The rich valuation is essentially pricing in future profitability rather than current results. The underlying bet assumes that SEER Robotics' controller business carries strong scale effects and platform characteristics—meaning profits could unlock non-linearly once a critical mass is reached.
How Does a "Data Flywheel" Become a Moat?
For investors, the appeal lies in the tech prowess of its control system, its established customer base, and the growth outlook for industrial intelligent robotics.
SEER Robotics' core product is the robot controller—the "brain" of the machine.
Citing CIC, the prospectus notes that by 2025 revenue, SEER Robotics ranked seventh globally and third domestically among industrial intelligent robotics firms, with shares of 1.1% and 2.5%. But by controller sales volume, it held the top spot worldwide and at home, commanding 24.8% and 45.2% of the market respectively.
More importantly, the company's real moat narrative revolves around a "data flywheel."
SEER Robotics argues that a true robot brain is more than a single model—it's an embodied intelligence system built on data loops, real-world scenarios, and multimodal models. Leveraging its first-mover advantage in large-scale deployments, the firm has built a flywheel: deploy, capture data, train, iterate, then scale.
Another dimension worth watching is the customer structure.
The customer base expanded from 587 to 832 and then 1,150 during the reporting period, split between integrators and end-users. Integrators have driven over 75% of revenue for three years running, hitting 82.9% in 2025, while end-users contributed 17.1%. Gross margins stood at 49% for integrators and 39.2% for end-users.
The integrator model allows rapid market coverage but limits direct brand access to end-users. If the data flywheel's value lies in accumulating real-world data, then how data ownership and usage rights are split between SEER Robotics and its integrators will directly determine the flywheel's speed.
Overall, SEER Robotics' listing sends a clear pricing signal for the "robot brain" niche. But going public is just the start. The real test is whether the data flywheel can accelerate amid sustained investment—and when that inflection point for profit will finally arrive.









