• RBA Expected to Hold Cash Rate at 4.35% in June, Reuters Poll Shows
  • New Zealand Dollar Weakens Below 0.5800 as Markets Await US Producer Price Data
  • Who Controls Bitcoin, and Can Anyone Shut It Down?
  • Gold Extends Losses as Stronger US Yields Weigh – ING
  • Indian Rupee Slides as Oil Prices Surge on Fears of US-Iran Ceasefire Collapse
2026-06-12
Coins by Cryptorank
  • Crypto News
  • AI News
  • Forex News
  • Sponsored
  • Press Release
  • Media Kit
  • Advertisement
  • More
    • About Us
    • Learn
    • Exclusive Article
    • Reviews
    • Events
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
  • Crypto News
  • AI News
  • Forex News
  • Sponsored
  • Press Release
  • Media Kit
  • Advertisement
  • More
    • About Us
    • Learn
    • Exclusive Article
    • Reviews
    • Events
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
Skip to content
Home AI News Theker raises $85M to build factory robots that don’t specialize in just one task
AI News

Theker raises $85M to build factory robots that don’t specialize in just one task

  • by Keshav Aggarwal
  • 2026-06-12
  • 0 Comments
  • 4 minutes read
  • 2 Views
  • 2 hours ago
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Whatsapp
A reconfigurable robotic arm in a modern warehouse, with interchangeable grippers nearby, representing Theker's generalist automation approach.

Humanoid robots may still be years away from replacing factory workers on a large scale, but the manufacturing industry is not waiting. Facing persistent labor shortages and rising demand for flexibility, manufacturers are turning to startups that promise a different kind of automation — one that adapts to the task, rather than the other way around.

That is the core bet behind Theker, a Barcelona-based AI robotics startup that has just raised $85 million in what it calls Europe’s largest ever robotics Series A round. The company’s approach is deliberately generalist: instead of building robots trained for a single, repetitive action, Theker designs machines that can be physically reconfigured — swapping out hands, arms, or entire form factors — depending on whether the job involves sorting packages, packing clothing, or handling bottles and cans in a warehouse.

“If you always have to put the same cookie in the same box, that works perfectly, but most processes aren’t like that,” co-founder Carla Gómez Cano told Bitcoin World. Theker is built for that messier reality.

A generalist approach to industrial robotics

Unlike humanoid robots from companies like Boston Dynamics, which are designed around a fixed physical form, Theker’s machines are modular. Their structure can be resized or reconfigured depending on the task at hand. This flexibility is intended to address a long-standing limitation in factory automation: traditional robots are highly efficient at one task, but expensive and difficult to repurpose.

Theker’s early backers signal where its ambitions begin. Inditex, the parent company of Zara, has signed on as an early customer. But the startup’s broader goal is to move beyond retail logistics into heavier industrial settings like manufacturing, where the complexity and scale of manual tasks is even greater.

The Series A round was led by American venture capital firm CRV and includes strategic investors such as Samsung and Aglaé Ventures, the investment vehicle tied to LVMH chairman Bernard Arnault. Gómez Cano said Samsung is not yet a customer, but the two are in advanced discussions. She noted that having Samsung as a customer, supplier, and investor simultaneously would give Theker both revenue and credibility in manufacturing at scale.

From pilots to real deployments

Gómez Cano emphasized that Theker was not built to run pilots. “We skip innovation departments entirely and go straight to logistics or operations, where deals are real and timelines are shorter,” she said. To demonstrate delivery capability, the company has opened a showroom in central Barcelona and plans to open others across Europe, the U.S., and Asia.

Theker will also grow its headcount across technology, deployment, and sales. The company has already received 15,000 job applications. “We have to filter like crazy,” Gómez Cano said. She estimated the team could grow from dozens to up to 120 people by the end of the year, then added: “I am saying that, but I also said that we’d raise $30 or $40 million!”

That the startup raised more than double its initial target also reinforces its conviction to remain headquartered in Barcelona, a growing robotics hub. “It has never been a barrier to acceleration for us, so we are making the most of it,” Gómez Cano said.

Why this matters for manufacturing

Theker’s funding round is one of the largest ever for a European robotics startup, and it reflects a broader shift in industrial automation. Manufacturers are increasingly looking for flexible solutions that can adapt to changing production lines and product mixes, rather than investing in highly specialized machines that become obsolete when processes change.

If Theker can deliver on its promise of reconfigurable, generalist robots, it could help accelerate automation in industries that have been difficult to mechanize — particularly those involving varied, non-repetitive tasks. That would be a significant step beyond the current state of factory robotics, where most machines are still trained for a single purpose.

Conclusion

Theker’s $85 million Series A is a strong signal that investors believe the future of factory automation lies in flexibility, not specialization. With backing from Inditex, Samsung, and LVMH’s investment arm, the startup has both the capital and the strategic partnerships to scale. Whether it can deliver on its ambitious vision — moving from retail logistics into heavy manufacturing — will be the key question in the years ahead.

FAQs

Q1: What makes Theker’s robots different from traditional factory robots?
A1: Theker’s robots are modular and reconfigurable. Their hands, arms, and overall form can be swapped out or resized depending on the task, unlike traditional robots that are designed for a single, repetitive action.

Q2: Who are Theker’s main investors and customers?
A2: The Series A was led by CRV and includes Samsung and Aglaé Ventures (LVMH). Inditex (Zara’s parent company) is an early customer. Samsung is in advanced discussions to potentially become a customer as well.

Q3: Where is Theker based and what are its expansion plans?
A3: Theker is headquartered in Barcelona, Spain. It plans to open additional showrooms across Europe, the U.S., and Asia, and grow its team to up to 120 people by the end of the year.

Disclaimer: The information provided is not trading advice, Bitcoinworld.co.in holds no liability for any investments made based on the information provided on this page. We strongly recommend independent research and/or consultation with a qualified professional before making any investment decisions.

Tags:

AIautomationEuropeFundingmanufacturingRoboticsStartupsTheker

Share This Post:

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Whatsapp
Avatar photo

Keshav Aggarwal

Co- Founder
Keshav Aggarwal is the Co-Founder & CEO of BitcoinWorld, a Google News - indexed publication covering crypto, AI, and forex markets since 2020. A blockchain investor and trader with over six years in the digital-asset space, he built one of India's most active crypto investor communities and has guided thousands of retail participants through their first investments in the asset class. At BitcoinWorld, he sets editorial direction across the newsroom and reports on the business of crypto, AI, and Web3 - tracking the funding rounds, product launches, and regulatory shifts shaping the future of finance and frontier technology.
Previous Post

Aptos Permanently Removes 187,800 APT From Circulation in May Burn

Next Post

WTI crude steadies near $85 as Trump signals openness to Iran nuclear deal

Categories

92

AI News

Crypto News

Bitcoin Treasury Ambition: The Blockchain Group Seeks Staggering €10 Billion

Events

97

Forex News

33

Learn

Press Release

Reviews

Google NewsGoogle News TwitterTwitter LinkedinLinkedin coinmarketcapcoinmarketcap BinanceBinance YouTubeYouTubes

Copyright © 2026 BitcoinWorld | Powered by BitcoinWorld