LG Electronics, the company most people associate with refrigerators and OLED TVs, is now one of the hottest robotics plays on the Korean stock market. Shares have climbed more than 300% year-to-date, reaching record highs near 281,000 won.
On June 1 alone, the stock jumped approximately 28% on reports of expanded cooperation with Nvidia in AI and robotics. May alone saw LG’s stock climb roughly 88%, a staggering monthly gain driven largely by growing optimism around this Nvidia connection and the broader robotics commercialization timeline.
From kitchen counters to factory floors
LG’s robotics ambitions trace back to at least March 2024, when the company made an initial $60 million investment in Bear Robotics, a US-based robotics startup. By January 2025, LG had acquired a controlling 51% stake in the company.
Bear Robotics specializes in autonomous service robots, the kind you might see delivering food in restaurants or navigating hotel hallways.
CEO Lyu Jae-cheol laid out this vision clearly in March 2026, describing the year as “pivotal” for expanding business-to-business robotics and actuator production.
Timelines have also been accelerated. Proof-of-concept demonstrations for LG’s robot commercialization efforts have been pulled forward to the first half of 2026.
The Nvidia factor
Reports of expanded cooperation between LG and Nvidia in AI and robotics triggered the massive 28% single-day surge on June 1. Nvidia’s robotics ecosystem, built around platforms like Isaac and its Jetson hardware, is rapidly becoming the standard toolkit for companies building autonomous machines.
What this means for investors
Analysts at several Korean brokerages have been tracking this transformation closely. Firms including Kiwoom Securities and Hana Securities have identified LG’s Bear Robotics acquisition and the accelerated commercialization timelines as key catalysts behind the stock’s performance.
The risk side deserves equal attention. A 300% gain in roughly five months prices in a lot of future success. LG still needs to prove it can ship robots at commercial scale, not just demonstrate prototypes. Any delays, technical setbacks, or cooling of the Nvidia relationship could trigger a sharp correction in a stock that has run this far, this fast.
LG isn’t the only legacy manufacturer eyeing robotics. Samsung, Hyundai (which owns Boston Dynamics), and a growing roster of Chinese competitors are all pursuing similar strategies.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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