Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Locus Robotics plans global expansion, increased R&D with $150 million venture round

Series E funding intended to meet escalations in e-commerce volumes, labor costs, and customer demands.

Locus Robotics plans global expansion, increased R&D with $150 million venture round

Autonomous mobile robot (AMR) vendor Locus Robotics will accelerate its product innovation and global expansion for warehouse fulfillment automation thanks to a $150 million venture capital round, the company said today.

The “series E” round was led by Tiger Global Management and the technology investment firm BOND, with additional support from existing investors including Scale Venture Partners and Prologis Ventures, the venture capital arm of logistics real estate giant Prologis. It follows a $40 million venture round in 2020 which brought the firm’s backing at the time to more than $105 million.


According to Locus, the round is also significant because it values the seven year old startup as being worth $1 billion, which is a threshold that venture capitalists call “unicorn” status. In fact, that milestone makes Locus Robotics the first AMR vendor to gain the unicorn badge, according to Ash Sharma, senior research director at market research consultancy firm Interact Analysis.

"The AMR industry had already been growing rapidly prior to Covid-19, and a large number of companies emerged following Amazon’s acquisition of Kiva Systems. Covid-19 acted as an accelerant, not only because it caused a massive spike in e-commerce, but also because of the social distancing measures it forced on e-commerce retailers, to which additional automation has been a crucial solution," Sharma said in a release. "The market is growing exponentially following years of successful pilots and proof-of-concepts by retailers and logistics companies. These same companies are now going from installing tens of AMRs to installing thousands."

Locus' new investors cited similar reasons for backing the firm. Their funding comes as warehouse operators face rapidly growing e-commerce volumes, rising labor costs, and increasingly demanding customers, Griffin Schroeder, Partner at Tiger Global, said in a release. To meet that need, Locus plans to use the money to expand its markets around the globe and support ongoing research and development (R&D).

Wilmington, Massachusetts-based Locus currently serves more than 40 customers and 80 warehouses around the world. Its bots can improve the efficiency of both inbound ("putaway") and outbound (“picking”) fulfillment by collaborating with warehouse employees and delivering mobile totes to them as needed. Each bot can automatically recognize workers, and use its large-screen display to share information in the worker’s preferred language, facilitating greater productivity and reduced error rates, the firm says. The company also uses real-time analytics, dashboards, and "gamification" to track individual performance statistics and motivate workers to greater achievement, Locus said.

"This new round of funding marks an important inflection point for Locus Robotics,” Locus CEO Rick Faulk said in a release. “Warehouses facing ongoing labor shortages and exploding volumes, are looking for flexible, intelligent automation to improve productivity and grow their operations."

Editor's note: This story was revised on February 18 to include input from Interact Analysis.


The Latest

More Stories

photo of laptop against an orange background

Companies need to plan for top five supply chain risks of 2025

The five most likely supply chain events that will impact business operations this year include climate change/weather, geopolitical instability, cybercrime, rare metals/minerals, and the crackdown on forced labor, according to a report from supply chain risk analytics provider Everstream Analytics.

“The past year has been unprecedented, with extreme weather events, heightened geopolitical tension and cybercrime destabilizing supply chains throughout the world. Navigating this year’s looming risks to build a secure supply network has never been more critical,” Corey Rhodes, CEO of Everstream Analytics, said in the firm’s “2025 Annual Risk Report.”

Keep ReadingShow less

Featured

chart of employment levels in transportation sectors

Unemployment rate stayed flat in December for transportation sector

The unemployment rate in the U.S. transportation sector was flat in December 2024 compared to the same month last year, coming in at 4.3% (not seasonally adjusted), according to the latest numbers from the Bureau of Transportation Statistics, part of the U.S. Department of Transportation.

That number is low compared to widespread unemployment in the transportation sector which reached its highest level during the COVID-19 pandemic at 15.7% in both May 2020 and July 2020. But it is slightly above the most recent pre-pandemic rate for the sector, which was 2.8% in December 2019, the BTS said.

Keep ReadingShow less
frigo-trans truck hauling healthcare cargo

UPS acquires two German healthcare logistics specialists

Parcel carrier and logistics provider UPS Inc. has acquired the German company Frigo-Trans and its sister company BPL, which provide complex healthcare logistics solutions across Europe, the Atlanta-based firm said this week.

According to UPS, the move extends its UPS Healthcare division’s ability to offer end-to-end capabilities for its customers, who increasingly need temperature-controlled and time-critical logistics solutions globally.

Keep ReadingShow less
screenshot of map of shipping risks

Overhaul lands $55 million backing for risk management tools

The supply chain risk management firm Overhaul has landed $55 million in backing, saying the financing will fuel its advancements in artificial intelligence and support its strategic acquisition roadmap.

The equity funding round comes from the private equity firm Springcoast Partners, with follow-on participation from existing investors Edison Partners and Americo. As part of the investment, Springcoast’s Chris Dederick and Holger Staude will join Overhaul’s board of directors.

Keep ReadingShow less
Report: Five trends in AI and data science for 2025

Report: Five trends in AI and data science for 2025

Artificial intelligence (AI) and data science were hot business topics in 2024 and will remain on the front burner in 2025, according to recent research published in AI in Action, a series of technology-focused columns in the MIT Sloan Management Review.

In Five Trends in AI and Data Science for 2025, researchers Tom Davenport and Randy Bean outline ways in which AI and our data-driven culture will continue to shape the business landscape in the coming year. The information comes from a range of recent AI-focused research projects, including the 2025 AI & Data Leadership Executive Benchmark Survey, an annual survey of data, analytics, and AI executives conducted by Bean’s educational firm, Data & AI Leadership Exchange.

Keep ReadingShow less