Nyobolt, a Cambridge University spinout founded in 2019, closed a £44m Series C on 6 May 2026, crossing the unicorn threshold at a $1bn valuation. 1 Symbotic, the Nasdaq-listed AI robotics company whose warehouse automation systems run for Walmart, led the round. IQ Capital, Latitude, Scania Invest, and CBMM (the Brazilian niobium producer whose materials are central to Nyobolt's anode chemistry) also participated.
Nyobolt's proprietary anode materials enable 0-80% battery charge in under five minutes at twenty times the energy density of supercapacitors. Revenue grew five times year-on-year. The primary customer profile, visible from Symbotic's lead position, is companies operating 24/7 robot fleets that cannot tolerate conventional multi-hour charging stops: warehouse automation, physical AI platforms, and data-centre edge infrastructure where robotics intermittent power draw meets continuous uptime requirements.
A Nasdaq-listed strategic rarely leads a materials science Series C without first qualifying the technology against its own system requirements. Symbotic's lead position signals that Nyobolt's fast-charge anode technology has passed that internal threshold: the equity position supplements, rather than replaces, a procurement commitment, anchoring the supply chain dependency in ownership terms. IQ Capital's participation continues a pattern visible in recent Cambridge ecosystem rounds, where the fund co-anchors alongside strategics at Series C .
Scania Invest's participation opens a second customer vertical beyond warehouse robotics: electric heavy goods vehicles with fast-charge requirements on depot-to-route cycles where conventional battery charging would break the operating economics. CBMM's equity stake aligns the primary materials supplier with Nyobolt's commercial trajectory, reducing supply-chain risk for the customers Symbotic represents. For a Cambridge spinout outside the London financing cluster, the $1bn valuation on 5x revenue growth sits at the stronger end of deeptech metrics in this coverage window. The European Commission's approval of EUR 211m Italian aid for CamGraPhIC illustrated how UK spinout IP can reach scale without UK manufacturing capital; Nyobolt's Symbotic anchor gives it a contracted US demand path that does not require a European state subsidy to validate.
