
Teradyne, Ouster, and Serve Robotics are the three Robotics stocks to watch today, according to MarketBeat’s stock screener tool. Robotics stocks are shares of publicly traded companies that design, manufacture, sell, or enable robots and related technologies — including industrial and service robots, sensors, actuators, machine vision, and automation software. Investors use the term to describe equities or ETFs that provide exposure to the automation and robotics theme, which can offer growth potential but also sector-specific risks and cyclicality. These companies had the highest dollar trading volume of any Robotics stocks within the last several days.
Teradyne (TER)
Teradyne, Inc. designs, develops, manufactures, and sells automated test systems and robotics products worldwide. It operates through four segments; Semiconductor Test, System Test, Robotics, and Wireless Test. The Semiconductor Test segment offers products and services for wafer level and device package testing of semiconductor devices in automotive, industrial, communications, consumer, smartphones, cloud, computer and electronic game, and other applications.
Ouster (OUST)
Ouster, Inc. provides lidar sensors for the automotive, industrial, robotics, and smart infrastructure industries in Americas, the Asia-Pacific, Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. Its products include high-resolution scanning and solid-state digital lidar sensors, analog lidar sensors, and software solutions.
Read Our Latest Research Report on OUST
Serve Robotics (SERV)
Serve Robotics Inc. designs, develops, and operates low-emission robots that serve people in public spaces with food delivery in the United States. It builds self-driving delivery robots. The company was formerly known as Patricia Acquisition Corp. and changed its name to Serve Robotics Inc. in July 2023.
Read Our Latest Research Report on SERV
Featured Articles
- MarketBeat’s Top Five Stocks to Own in April 2026
- CrowdStrike Stock Drops on AI Fears—Is This a Buying Opportunity?
- Conagra Stock Yields Nearly 9% After a 60% Decline—Time to Buy?
- Down 75% From Its High, How Much Lower Can Nike Get?
- Frozen Out: Lamb Weston Beats Earnings, but the Stock Still Slides
- Lilly’s Next Empire: A $10 Billion Bet on AI and Neuroscience
