CEO of Boston Dynamics to step down, as Hyundai's robot strategy in focus


Boston Dynamics Atlas robots are displayed in the Hyundai Motor Group booth during CES 2026, an annual consumer electronics trade show, in Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. January 6, 2026. REUTERS/Steve Marcus

SEOUL, Feb 11 (Reuters) - Robert ⁠Playter, chief executive of Hyundai Motor Group's ‌robot affiliate Boston Dynamics is stepping down, the Waltham, Massachusetts-based company said on its X account.

Shares of Hyundai ​Motor rallied 5.9% in Seoul ⁠trading on Wednesday as ⁠the leadership change spurred market expectation that the ⁠automaker ‌intends to accelerate commercialisation of its robot business.

"The stock appeared to ⁠have risen because of the news about ​the resignation ‌of the CEO," said James Hong, ⁠Seoul-based analyst ​at Macquarie, adding that Playter's team had been "R&D-oriented" for robot development.

A media report that Boston ⁠Dynamics' robot dogs have been ​deployed to work at a nuclear power plant in Britain also contributed to the stock's gains, ⁠a note from Seoul-based Daishin Securities said.

Hyundai Motor Group, which controls Hyundai and Kia, acquired Boston Dynamics in 2021 with a ​majority stake.

In January, Hyundai said ⁠it plans to deploy humanoid robots made ​by Boston Dynamics at its ‌U.S. manufacturing plant in ​Georgia.

Kia's shares gained 4.6%.

(Reporting by Heejin Kim and Jihoon LeeEditing by Ed Davies)

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