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Korean AI chip startup DEEPX, Hyundai work on robots powered by generative AI

By Thomson Reuters Apr 14, 2026 | 10:06 PM

By Hyunjoo Jin

SEOUL, April 15 (Reuters) – South Korean AI chip startup DEEPX will expand its partnership with Hyundai Motor Group to develop a computing platform for generative AI robots using its second generation of ​low-power chips, its top executive said, as it gets set for ‌an IPO.

DEEPX is in talks with the government and investors to raise more than 600 billion won ($408 million) in an ongoing funding round, in the run-up to a potential IPO in South Korea, DEEPX CEO Lokwon Kim said.

The company, which began producing chips late last year, ‌is ​one of a number of South Korean startups riding ⁠on Seoul’s ambitions to nurture ⁠artificial intelligence champions and make the country an AI leader.

Founded by Kim, a former Apple engineer, DEEPX develops neural processing units (NPUs) which allow robots, factories and self-driving cars to handle AI tasks on-device, meaning without external connectivity. ​It has already developed AI chips used in Hyundai’s four-wheeled delivery robots.

Hyundai’s new robotics platform will use DEEPX’s second-generation DX-M2 chips, which will go into ⁠volume production later next year using Samsung Electronics’ ⁠most advanced 2-nanometer chipmaking technology.

Kim said DEEPX’s lower-power chips would be ​able to help prevent energy-hungry humanoid robots from overheating, but did not elaborate ​on which robots would use its DX-M2 chips.

The company’s current-generation chips are ‌20 times more power-efficient and are much cheaper than Nvidia’s Jetson Orin, Kim said.

“Our next-generation chips are optimized for generative AI, which, like ChatGPT, will enable robots to learn from their experiences,” he said in an interview.

Hyundai, which unveiled its ⁠Atlas humanoid robot in January, plans to build a factory capable of manufacturing 30,000 robot units annually by 2028.

The head of Hyundai’s Robotics LAB, Hyun Dong-jin, said ⁠its work with DEEPX is ‌part of an effort to build an ecosystem of ⁠on-device computing partners in South Korea and overseas.

DEEPX counts ​China’s Baidu ‌as one of its customers. It aims to achieve ​revenue of $40 million ⁠this year.

DEEPX CFO Young Cho told reporters on Tuesday the company’s priority was to be listed on the Korean stock market, but a secondary U.S. listing through American Depositary Receipts could be considered later.

The executives did not disclose what the ongoing funding round would value the whole company at.

($1 = 1,470.2800 won)

(Reporting by Hyunjoo Jin; ​Editing by Sonali Paul)