Tether Backs €70M Robotics Startup to Push Into Real-World Technology

Tether’s latest investment is pushing the firm far beyond the stablecoin world, with the company joining a €70 million funding round for Generative Bionics, a robotics venture spun out of the Italian Institute of Technology.
The startup is developing humanoid machines built for industrial environments, aiming to replace physically demanding or hazardous jobs that conventional automation struggles to tackle.
- Tether joined a €70 million investment round for Italian robotics firm Generative Bionics.
- The startup is building humanoid robots for industrial and logistics environments.
- CEO Paolo Ardoino says the move reflects Tether’s push into physical and digital infrastructure.
The company’s work centers on so-called “physical AI” — robots designed to move and operate within spaces originally created for humans, including factories, logistics centers, warehouses, healthcare sites, and retail back-end operations.
Generative Bionics plans to begin deploying its first pilots in early 2026, positioning its machines as potential substitutes for labor shortages and repetitive manual roles rather than factory-line robot arms.
For Tether, the backing is part of an ongoing attempt to widen its footprint beyond digital asset issuance. Chief executive Paolo Ardoino has repeatedly argued that the firm intends to support both software-driven and real-world infrastructure, including artificial intelligence, Bitcoin mining operations, and hardware innovation that can reduce reliance on centralized technology platforms.
He said the robotics investment reflects Tether’s belief that technology should reinforce resilience and expand human productivity, not simply exist inside financial markets.
The timing of the move adds another layer of meaning. Earlier this month, S&P Global downgraded USDT’s stability assessment, flagging concerns about Tether’s growing exposure to bitcoin and other investments with limited transparency. Tether rejected the ratings view as outdated, but the push into robotics and automation underscores the company’s desire to frame itself as an active technology investor with ambitions that reach beyond stablecoin dominance.
Generative Bionics is not the only robotics project linked to Tether. Last month, the Financial Times reported that the firm was discussing a potential investment in Neura Robotics, a German automation startup valued at around $10 billion, signaling that this interest may form part of a broader strategic direction rather than a one-off experiment.
By positioning itself inside the emerging field of humanoid industrial robotics, Tether appears to be attempting to diversify the public narrative around its business. Whether these gambles deliver returns or credibility remains to be seen, but the company is clearly looking for influence in sectors well outside digital payments — and sees automation as one area where it might evolve its identity and long-term relevance.
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