Here's a robotics story that actually makes sense: warehouses need to move stuff around efficiently, and robots are getting really good at that. Zhejiang Galaxis Technology Group Co. Ltd., a Chinese manufacturer of warehouse robots, just filed for a Hong Kong IPO this month, joining a growing parade of robotics companies tapping into capital markets for growth funding.
The AI boom has touched practically every corner of the economy, with companies scrambling to showcase their artificial intelligence credentials. But robotics stands out as one area where the AI hype actually translates into tangible improvements. We're talking about intelligent, autonomous robots that can navigate warehouses, sort packages, and manage inventory without constant human supervision. That's valuable stuff, which explains why investors in Hong Kong have been receptive to these concept stocks.
The Founders and Backers
Galaxis was founded in 2016 by two impressive technical minds. Gu Chunguang holds a PhD from MIT and previously served as Chief Technology Officer for Shanghai-listed Jointown Pharmaceutical. His co-founder Yang Yan also has a PhD in electrical engineering from Cornell University and worked at Infineon's China unit, the global chip giant.
Today, Gu serves as chairman and controls roughly 40.3% of the company's shares, while Yang holds the position of deputy general manager. The company has assembled an impressive roster of institutional backers, including two funds from CICC, one of China's leading investment banks, plus logistics powerhouse S.F. Holding, China Merchants Group, and Gu's former employer, Jointown Pharma.
What Intralogistics Actually Means
Galaxis specializes in intralogistics, which sounds fancy but simply refers to moving, storing, retrieving and managing materials and goods inside warehouses, distribution centers and factories. It's the unglamorous work that makes modern supply chains function. By 2024, the global intralogistics market reached a substantial 2.3 trillion yuan, or about $329.1 billion.
Historically, this work relied heavily on manual labor. But the sector is experiencing a fundamental transformation driven by AI applications, improved hardware capabilities, internet of things technology, and integrated software systems. Robotics in particular has dramatically boosted efficiency across core intralogistics functions like storage, retrieval, sorting and transportation. The result is lower labor costs combined with better accuracy and efficiency.
A Market Ripe for Consolidation
The global market for intelligent intralogistics robotics is expanding rapidly, fueled by corporate demand for logistics efficiency and automation, according to third-party research cited in Galaxis' prospectus. The market grew from 42.6 billion yuan in 2020 to 118.3 billion yuan in 2024, with China representing 37.2% of the total. Projections suggest it could reach 344.1 billion yuan by 2030.
China's intelligent intralogistics robotics sector currently hosts around 100 firms, indicating the market remains highly fragmented. Galaxis commands just 1.6% market share, yet that's still enough to rank fifth domestically. The industry leader holds only 4.6% of the market. Combined, the top five players control merely 12.6% of the total, suggesting significant room for consolidation ahead.
The Product Lineup
Galaxis manufactures three core product categories: multi-directional shuttle robots (MSRs), autonomous mobile robots (AMRs), and conveying and sorting robots (CSRs). Among its shuttle robots, which handle containers and pallets, the four-way shuttle robots offer maximum flexibility by moving in any direction—forward, backward, left and right. Their compact size and high maneuverability make them especially effective for high-density inventory processing within rack systems.
The company's AMRs feature high precision and efficiency, adapting well to high-density storage environments. They can interface with floor-level containers and pallets and perform lifting operations, making them suitable for accessing and transporting bins and pallets. Meanwhile, Galaxis' CSRs use mechanical arms and sorting mechanisms to rapidly distribute items into designated channels, enabling high-precision, uninterrupted 24-hour operations.
Rapid Growth, Persistent Losses
Galaxis is growing quickly as logistics companies transition from manual to robotic operations. Revenue jumped 60.3% year-on-year to 552 million yuan in the first nine months of 2025, with 92.5% of sales generated domestically in China. Multi-function comprehensive systems—which integrate self-developed robots with third-party products to address multiple operational needs—contributed 73.3% of total revenue. Single-function robot deployments accounted for 24.8%.
As revenue boomed, Galaxis' gross profit reached 91.4 million yuan in the first nine months of 2025, up 51.8% year-on-year. Gross profit from multi-function comprehensive systems surged 129% to 49 million yuan, representing 53.6% of the total. The gross margin for that segment increased by 2.8 percentage points year-on-year to 12.1%. However, significant declines in after-sales services and other segments caused the overall gross margin to slip by 0.9 percentage points year-on-year to 16.6%.
The company continues bleeding red ink, posting a 135 million yuan loss in the first nine months of 2025, similar to the previous year's loss. The ongoing losses stem primarily from rising expenses in sales and marketing, administration, and research and development. Administrative expenses jumped particularly sharply, increasing 33.2% year-on-year to 56.9 million yuan in the first nine months of last year, driven largely by IPO preparation costs.
Future Prospects and Valuation Questions
Despite current losses, Galaxis' future potential looks promising. The global penetration rate for intralogistics robots stood at only about 20.5% in 2025, suggesting enormous room for growth. The company's accelerating overseas expansion could help reduce losses, and it's worth noting that the recent spike in administrative expenses relates mostly to the IPO—a one-time event. That means the company's prospects for achieving profitability in the foreseeable future appear reasonably solid.
A useful benchmark might be Geekplus (2590.HK), another Hong Kong-listed company that leads in AMR technology. Geekplus currently trades at a price-to-sales ratio of 10.6 times based on estimated revenue exceeding 3 billion yuan last year. Galaxis' probable revenue for last year is far smaller, likely well under 1 billion yuan. That means such a lofty valuation multiple may be unrealistic. Any attempt to achieve comparable multiples could ultimately dampen investor demand for the stock, even in Hong Kong's current hot market for robotics IPOs.




