8.8 C
Munich
星期六, 4 4 月, 2026

iRobot, the maker of Roomba vacuums, files for bankruptcy and sells itself to Chinese company

Must read

‘Structural collapse’ at football stadium leaves 60 people injured in Peru

At least 60 people have been injured after a 'structural collapse' at a football stadium in Peru, with hospitals on high alert following the...

T-Mobile is destroying itself as insiders dump the stock and customers get ready to leave

T-Mobile’s days as the Un-carrier are over as ridiculous changes are ruining the wireless provider's image. #TMobile #destroying #insiders #dump #stock #customers #ready #leave

Legendary musician dies after ‘serious health issues’ as famous pals pay tribute

Legendary R&B session drummer James Gadson has sadly died and tributes have been pouring in, including a heartfelt message from Ghostbusters star Ray Parker...

Alberta’s proposed immigration bill would create more red tape: hospitality sector

The restaurant business has weathered its fair share of troubles since the pandemic and labour shortages continues to be a main point of concern...

Roomba maker iRobot filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Sunday and said the robotic vacuum cleaner would sell itself to a Chinese contract manufacturer. 

Shenzhen PICEA Robotics Co., which makes Roombas for Bedford, Massachusetts-based iRobot, will buy the company, according to a news release. iRobot said it doesn’t expect any disruptions to its app, customer service or other functions. 

Founded in 1990 by MIT roboticists, iRobot initially designed robots for space exploration, according to the company. iRobot debuted the Roomba in 2002, billing it as the first robotic vacuum for household floors. As sales grew, the company went public in 2005, and its stock price once topped $125.

Shares of iRobot fell $3.12, or 72%, to $1.20 in pre-market trading on Monday.

Amazon agreed to buy iRobot for $1.7 billion in 2022, but the deal fell apart last year after pushback from European Union regulators. At that time, Amazon said it would pay iRobot an agreed-upon termination fee of $94 million, while the vacuum maker planned to restructure to help stabilize the business. 

In September, iRobot warned that it was struggling with declining sales as consumers cut spending, warning that it was at risk of either shutting down some operations or filing for bankruptcy. 

Under the deal with Picea, iRobot said it will continue to operate “in the ordinary course with no anticipated disruption to its app functionality, customer programs, global partners, supply chain relationships or ongoing product support.”

#iRobot #maker #Roomba #vacuums #files #bankruptcy #sells #Chinese #company

- Advertisement -

More articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisement -

Latest article

‘Structural collapse’ at football stadium leaves 60 people injured in Peru

At least 60 people have been injured after a 'structural collapse' at a football stadium in Peru, with hospitals on high alert following the...

T-Mobile is destroying itself as insiders dump the stock and customers get ready to leave

T-Mobile’s days as the Un-carrier are over as ridiculous changes are ruining the wireless provider's image. #TMobile #destroying #insiders #dump #stock #customers #ready #leave

Legendary musician dies after ‘serious health issues’ as famous pals pay tribute

Legendary R&B session drummer James Gadson has sadly died and tributes have been pouring in, including a heartfelt message from Ghostbusters star Ray Parker...

Alberta’s proposed immigration bill would create more red tape: hospitality sector

The restaurant business has weathered its fair share of troubles since the pandemic and labour shortages continues to be a main point of concern...

The customization revolution is finally here — but some Galaxy users aren't invited

One UI 8.5 users, it's time to check for the latest QuickStar update! #customization #revolution #finally #Galaxy #users #aren039t #invited