
China’s innovation ecosystem has witnessed a resurgence, minting 67 new unicorn start-ups in the first half of 2026 – the biggest increase in almost five years – as AI and robotics kick off a new investment cycle.
The growth translates into an average of one new unicorn – private companies valued at US$1 billion or more – in less than every three days and was the highest since the second half of 2021 when 76 new unicorns were created, according to a Monday report by ITJuzi, a start-up database.
The momentum was tightly clustered around two cutting-edge industries – artificial intelligence and robotics – which together accounted for more than 53 per cent of the cohort. This differed from the previous cycle between 2021 and 2022, when large start-ups spanned multiple sectors including new-energy vehicles, biomedicine and online consumer businesses.
But most of the new unicorns – about 78 per cent – were valued between US$1 billion and US$2 billion, suggesting they were still “in the early stages of growth”, according to the report. No companies fell into the US$5 billion to US$10 billion bracket, which marked a valuation jump between “unicorns” and “super unicorns”.

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