Chinese EV maker XPeng leads investment in $200 million fund focused on ‘frontier technology’

Technology

In this article

A new Xpeng P7 car is shown in the Xpeng Motors flagship store in a shopping mall. Xpeng P7 is one of the two popular models of Xpeng motors.
Zhang Peng | LightRocket | Getty Images

China’s XPeng said Thursday it led an investment into a new $200 million fund focused on backing electric vehicles and “frontier technology” start-ups.

The fund, called Rockets Capital, also counts a number of high-profile venture capital players among the investors including IDG Capital, eGarden, Sequoia China, 5Y Capital and GGV Capital.

Rockets Capital will focus on “venture and growth stage investments in Smart EV industry value chain, clean energy, and frontier technology areas.”

XPeng did not expand on what “frontier technology” would include, but China’s government has identified several areas that fall under this umbrella, including artificial intelligence and semiconductors.

The latest fund comes as the electric vehicle industry is expected to continue its growth. Market research firm Gartner forecasts 6 million electric cars will be shipped this year versus 4 million in 2021.

But global financial markets have also seen large volatility with Chinese technology stocks in particular taking a hammering, though they have staged a comeback in the last two days.

Bing Yuan, managing partner of Rockets Capital, said the closing of the fund is a “testimony that in the constantly evolving investment industry, the low carbon economy and technology-driven development are the consensus investment trends.”

Rockets Capital will operate independently from XPeng. The electric car company said the fund will leverage XPeng’s “industry expertise and resources” and “incubate technological innovation.”

The fund has already “entered into agreements” to invest in companies, XPeng said without disclosing any names.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Donald Trump Has A Massive Pennsylvania Problem
Alphabet tempers worries that it’s falling behind in AI in Q1 results
If Happy Gilmore 2 Is Actually Happening, Here Are 8 Things We Need To See
NASA Formally Retires Mars InSight Lander 4 Years After Its Arrival on Red Planet
ISRO’s Upcoming Experiments for 2023 Includes Dedicated Mission for Sun, Moon