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Cathie Wood: Humanoid Robots Are the ‘Biggest of All’ Embodied AI Opportunities
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ARK Invest CEO Cathie Wood has identified humanoid robots as the single most significant investment opportunity within the "embodied AI" sector, placing the emerging category ahead of more established frontiers like robotaxis and healthcare.
Speaking in a CNBC interview on Tuesday, Wood, who is known for her high-conviction bets on disruptive technologies, framed the current AI boom as the "very beginning of a technology revolution."
While acknowledging widespread concerns about "AI hype" and high valuations in the tech sector, Wood argued that the long-term potential justifies the current market premiums, provided investors maintain a long-term perspective.
"As we're looking to the future, especially with embodied AI, which is all about robotaxies... and then health care... we think that this investment will pay off," Wood stated. "And I think the chaser is going to be humanoid robots. And I think that is going to be the biggest of all the embodied AI opportunities."
Wood's designation of humanoids as the "chaser" suggests she sees them as the ultimate application of AI in the physical world, following initial waves in transportation and medicine.
Cathie Wood: ‘The biggest embodied AI opportunity will be humanoid robots.’ ARK Invest’s CEO sees robotaxis, healthcare, and humanoids as the next major AI wave. (CNBC interview, Oct 2025)
The Productivity Boom Thesis
Wood's bullish stance on AI and robotics is tied to a broader macroeconomic forecast. She explicitly stated, "I do not believe AI is in a bubble," though she cautioned that enterprise adoption will be a slow-moving process.
She argued that it will "take a while for large corporations to prepare themselves to transform," requiring significant internal restructuring to capitalize on the productivity gains AI promises.
This transformation, she believes, will be turbocharged by new U.S. tax policies, particularly accelerated depreciation for manufacturing structures and equipment. This policy, Wood argued, "is going to turbocharge innovation" and will contribute to a "productivity-led boom."
While Wood did not draw the line explicitly, the connection is clear: humanoid robots, designed for manufacturing, logistics, and industrial tasks, are precisely the kind of "equipment" that would benefit from such incentives, potentially speeding up their deployment in the enterprise sector she sees as currently lagging.
Long-Term Horizon
When pressed on whether high-flying AI stocks are in a bubble, Wood defended the valuations by citing ARK's five-year investment time horizon.
"If our expectations for AI, especially embodied AI in the way that I just described, are correct, we are at the very beginning of a technology revolution," she said, conceding that market corrections are inevitable as investors debate whether growth is happening "too much too soon."