

Core Viewpoint - The report from CITIC Construction Investment indicates that humanoid robots (non-completely humanoid) need to possess multimodal perception and end-to-end large model capabilities to achieve logistics sorting operations. The current hardware of humanoid robots has reached the commercialization threshold for logistics scenarios, but domestic embodied models still require improvements for practical implementation [1] Economic Analysis - From an economic perspective, under the assumption of recovering costs within two years, the input-output ratio of humanoid robots has already matched that of sorting workers. This suggests a competitive economic viability for the deployment of humanoid robots in logistics [1] Market Outlook - It is anticipated that in the second half of this year, humanoid robots will gradually transition from demo scenarios to customer trial deliveries. Following customer validation, a significant growth surge is expected next year [1]