Two months after Hyundai's CES 2026 unveiling of the Atlas humanoid robot, the company's shares jumped 80 percent amid intensifying competition with Tesla's Optimus in the humanoid robotics market, projected to hit $5 trillion by 2050. While Atlas targets heavy industry from 2028, Tesla aims for affordable home use.
Following the January 2026 CES demonstration in Las Vegas—where Boston Dynamics' Atlas showcased advanced self-righting, fluid motion, and precise control—Hyundai's stock surged 80 percent, signaling investor enthusiasm for its humanoid robotics push.
Building on initial plans for factory deployment at the Georgia Metaplant America by 2028, Hyundai is committing $6.3 billion in South Korea, including a dedicated robot manufacturing plant and an AI data hub equipped with 50,000 Nvidia GPUs to support complex assembly tasks by 2030.
This escalates rivalry with Tesla's Optimus, which prioritizes affordability ($20,000-$30,000 price) for household and light logistics tasks like cleaning and sorting. At 1.73 meters tall with an 8-hour battery and 20 kg carry capacity, Optimus contrasts Atlas's industrial strength (50 kg lift, 56 degrees of freedom).
Leveraging automotive expertise in batteries, motors, sensors, and AI, Hyundai's heavy-industry strategy challenges Tesla's mass-consumer approach, reshaping the sector's future.