Marketdash

iRobot Files for Bankruptcy After 35 Years, Stock Crashes 83% in Pre-Market

MarketDash Editorial Team
8 hours ago
The maker of Roomba vacuum cleaners has filed Chapter 11 bankruptcy and will be acquired by its Chinese manufacturer, ending more than three decades as an independent company and wiping out public shareholders.

Sometimes a company famous for cleaning up messes finds itself in one it can't vacuum away. iRobot Corp. (IRBT), the Massachusetts robotics company that brought us the Roomba, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection Sunday after 35 years in business. The stock tumbled 83.42% in pre-market trading Monday as investors absorbed the news.

From MIT Lab to Private Hands

The bankruptcy filing in Delaware court comes with a buyer already lined up. Shenzhen PICEA, a vacuum cleaner manufacturer with operations in China and Vietnam, will acquire iRobot outright. Here's the twist: PICEA isn't just some random acquirer—it's already iRobot's main manufacturer and lender. The deal is structured to keep iRobot's business running, push product development forward, and satisfy financial obligations.

Once the acquisition closes, iRobot will become a private company under PICEA's ownership, and those publicly traded shares will disappear from stock exchanges. It's an unceremonious ending for a company founded in 1990 by three MIT roboticists who launched the iconic Roomba robot vacuum in 2002.

The Numbers Tell a Rough Story

iRobot's bankruptcy didn't come out of nowhere. The third quarter of 2025 brought brutal numbers: revenue dropped nearly 25%, and the mix shifted unfavorably. Mid-tier and premium robots fell to 74% of sales from 79% the prior year. Meanwhile, cash and cash equivalents shrank to $24.8 million by September 27, down from $40.6 million in late June. That's not a lot of runway for a company burning cash.

CEO Gary Cohen pointed to market headwinds, production delays, and shipping disruptions as culprits behind the revenue miss. Those factors accelerated cash burn and squeezed profitability harder than expected.

The troubles ran deeper than one bad quarter. Back in October, iRobot's stock cratered by more than a third when the last potential buyer walked away from sale negotiations, citing the company's deteriorating financial condition. That collapse happened against the backdrop of Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN) abandoning its planned $1.7 billion acquisition in January 2024 due to regulatory roadblocks. Losing that Amazon deal was arguably the beginning of the end—iRobot had been searching for a lifeline ever since.

Year-to-date, iRobot stock lost 45.66% before Monday's pre-market wipeout.

The Broader Robotics Picture

The irony here is that robotics as an industry has been gaining momentum. In December, robotics stocks including Serve Robotics Inc. (SERV), Richtech Robotics Inc. (RR), and even iRobot itself rallied on reports that the Trump administration planned an executive order to accelerate industry growth. But sector enthusiasm doesn't pay the bills when your cash reserves are evaporating and buyers keep walking away.

For iRobot, the Chapter 11 filing and PICEA acquisition represent a lifeline of sorts—albeit one that wipes out public shareholders and ends the company's run as an independent American robotics pioneer. After three and a half decades, the Roomba maker is getting swept up by its own manufacturer.

iRobot Files for Bankruptcy After 35 Years, Stock Crashes 83% in Pre-Market

MarketDash Editorial Team
8 hours ago
The maker of Roomba vacuum cleaners has filed Chapter 11 bankruptcy and will be acquired by its Chinese manufacturer, ending more than three decades as an independent company and wiping out public shareholders.

Sometimes a company famous for cleaning up messes finds itself in one it can't vacuum away. iRobot Corp. (IRBT), the Massachusetts robotics company that brought us the Roomba, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection Sunday after 35 years in business. The stock tumbled 83.42% in pre-market trading Monday as investors absorbed the news.

From MIT Lab to Private Hands

The bankruptcy filing in Delaware court comes with a buyer already lined up. Shenzhen PICEA, a vacuum cleaner manufacturer with operations in China and Vietnam, will acquire iRobot outright. Here's the twist: PICEA isn't just some random acquirer—it's already iRobot's main manufacturer and lender. The deal is structured to keep iRobot's business running, push product development forward, and satisfy financial obligations.

Once the acquisition closes, iRobot will become a private company under PICEA's ownership, and those publicly traded shares will disappear from stock exchanges. It's an unceremonious ending for a company founded in 1990 by three MIT roboticists who launched the iconic Roomba robot vacuum in 2002.

The Numbers Tell a Rough Story

iRobot's bankruptcy didn't come out of nowhere. The third quarter of 2025 brought brutal numbers: revenue dropped nearly 25%, and the mix shifted unfavorably. Mid-tier and premium robots fell to 74% of sales from 79% the prior year. Meanwhile, cash and cash equivalents shrank to $24.8 million by September 27, down from $40.6 million in late June. That's not a lot of runway for a company burning cash.

CEO Gary Cohen pointed to market headwinds, production delays, and shipping disruptions as culprits behind the revenue miss. Those factors accelerated cash burn and squeezed profitability harder than expected.

The troubles ran deeper than one bad quarter. Back in October, iRobot's stock cratered by more than a third when the last potential buyer walked away from sale negotiations, citing the company's deteriorating financial condition. That collapse happened against the backdrop of Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN) abandoning its planned $1.7 billion acquisition in January 2024 due to regulatory roadblocks. Losing that Amazon deal was arguably the beginning of the end—iRobot had been searching for a lifeline ever since.

Year-to-date, iRobot stock lost 45.66% before Monday's pre-market wipeout.

The Broader Robotics Picture

The irony here is that robotics as an industry has been gaining momentum. In December, robotics stocks including Serve Robotics Inc. (SERV), Richtech Robotics Inc. (RR), and even iRobot itself rallied on reports that the Trump administration planned an executive order to accelerate industry growth. But sector enthusiasm doesn't pay the bills when your cash reserves are evaporating and buyers keep walking away.

For iRobot, the Chapter 11 filing and PICEA acquisition represent a lifeline of sorts—albeit one that wipes out public shareholders and ends the company's run as an independent American robotics pioneer. After three and a half decades, the Roomba maker is getting swept up by its own manufacturer.