Artificial intelligence is often framed as a software revolution. In reality, its long-term impact will be governed by physics.

The first phase of AI has centred on training increasingly complex models inside energy-intensive data centres. The next phase – what we describe as physical AI – is about deploying digital intelligence into the real world: autonomous vehicles, humanoid robots, industrial automation systems and drones. In this implementation phase, algorithms must move motors, power actuators and operate continuously in dynamic environments. Unlike software, physical AI runs entirely on electricity.

Physical AI: Bridging AI with the real world
Physical Ai Bridging Artificial Intelligence With The Real World
Source: Polar Capital, December 2025. Images: Ateago, Agrobot, Amazon, Ehang, Figure, Intuitive Surgical, Keeta, Waymo.

For us, this is not a peripheral theme. It sits squarely at the intersection of electrification, energy efficiency and digitisation – the core pillars of what we see as the electricity megacycle.

From training models to moving machines

While AI infrastructure remains a powerful driver of electricity demand, we believe the more profound long-term shift lies in the physical world.

Physical AI represents installing digital intelligence into machines capable of interacting with unstructured environments. Humanoid robots are the most visible example. Unlike traditional fixed-purpose industrial robots, humanoids are general-purpose systems designed to replicate human dexterity and mobility. Initial uses are concentrated in manufacturing, warehousing and logistics, where tasks are repetitive and structured. Over time, applications are likely to extend into services, healthcare and retail.

Electricity demand growth from 2020
65% of all electricity demand growth is to come from new demand drivers by 2050

Electricity As The Cornerstone Of Multiple Megatrends
Source: Polar Capital estimates as at July 2023; BNEF for historical figures. Forecasts contained herein are for illustrative purposes only and does not constitute advice or a recommendation.

From an energy perspective, this shift is material. A current industrial humanoid consumes around 2kW during operation and can operate for only two to three hours per charge at peak load. While its peak power draw is lower than that of an electric vehicle, its average daily energy use may be higher due to longer operating hours.

Looking ahead, even under conservative efficiency assumptions, global humanoid electricity demand could reach 5,200TWh annually by 2050, exceeding current US electricity consumption. Physical AI therefore sits alongside data centres and electric vehicles as a structurally significant new source of power demand.

Economics and scale

The key question is not whether humanoids are technically feasible, but whether they are economically compelling.

Hardware costs are already declining. Average humanoid prices have fallen from more than $250,000 in 2022 to roughly $100,000-150,000 today. As scale increases and component costs fall further, payback periods are expected to shorten. Industrial humanoids currently offer payback periods of around six years, potentially declining to two years by 2030 as utilisation improves and costs fall.

Humanoid robot market to reach $5trn by 2050
1 billion units in use globally by 2050

Humanoid Robot Market To Reach $5 Trillion By 2050

Source: Polar Capital estimates, 17 January 2026; https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/SL.SRV.EMPL.ZS. Forecasts contained herein are for illustrative purposes only and does not constitute advice or a recommendation.

Under our long-term scenario, cumulative use could reach one billion units globally by 2050, implying a total addressable market of approximately $5trn. If robots can meaningfully replace or augment labour in sectors facing structural shortages and wage inflation, adoption could accelerate rapidly.

Crucially, energy efficiency remains central to the economics. Improvements in battery density, actuator performance, regenerative systems and power management directly enhance utilisation rates and total cost of ownership. In physical AI, electricity management is not a secondary consideration; it is foundational.

Geography and the manufacturing edge

While the US currently leads in frontier AI model development, physical AI may ultimately be a manufacturing-intensive competition.

China already commands significant share across robotics supply chains and benefits from deep industrial ecosystems and coordinated policy support. As humanoid production scales from thousands to millions of units, mass manufacturing capability could become a decisive advantage. For investors, this introduces both opportunity and geopolitical complexity. Selective exposure across enabling technologies rather than solely focusing on final assemblers may offer a more balanced approach.

Investing in the enablers

For the Polar Capital Smart Energy Fund, the opportunity lies less in the most visible robotics brands and more in the enabling ecosystem. Physical AI requires advanced power semiconductors, high-performance actuators, sensors, thermal management systems, optical communication infrastructure, batteries and grid-connected power equipment.

Semiconductor content per humanoid is estimated to be roughly 10x that of traditional industrial robots. The electrification intensity of physical AI is structurally higher than many legacy automation systems. Many of the companies supplying these components also serve adjacent end-markets such as data centres, electric vehicles and industrial automation, providing diversified exposure within a coherent thematic framework.

From bits to electrons

AI began as a computational story. It is becoming an energy story.

The digital intelligence being developed today will not remain confined to servers. It will inhabit machines that move, lift, assemble, inspect and transport. Every such machine will draw power from the grid. Every incremental efficiency gain in generation, transmission and conversion will matter.

Physical AI bridges software and hardware, algorithms and infrastructure. For long-term investors, the defining question is not whether automation advances, but how efficiently it is powered. In our view, the companies enabling that efficient electrification sit at the heart of one of the most compelling structural investment themes of the coming decades.

Risks:

  • Capital is at risk and there is no guarantee the Fund will achieve its objective. Investors should make sure their attitude towards risk is aligned with the risk profile of the Fund before investing.
  • Past performance is not a reliable guide to future performance. The value of investments may go down as well as up and you might get back less than you originally invested as there is no guarantee in place.
  • The value of a fund’s assets may be affected by uncertainties such as international political developments, market sentiment, economic conditions, changes in government policies, restrictions on foreign investment and currency repatriation, currency fluctuations and other developments in the laws and regulations of countries in which investment may be made. Please see the Fund’s Prospectus for details of all risks.
  • The fund is exposed to Sustainability risks which are environmental, social and governance factors that could have an actual or potential material negative impact on the value of the Fund and its risk factors.
  • The Fund invests in the shares of companies and share prices can rise or fall due to several factors affecting global stock markets.
  • The Fund uses derivatives which carry the risk of reduced liquidity, substantial loss, and increased volatility in adverse market conditions, such as failure amongst market participants.
  • The Fund invests in assets denominated in currencies other than the Fund's base currency. Changes in exchange rates may have a negative impact on the Fund's investments. If the share class currency is different from the currency of the country in which you reside, exchange rate fluctuations may affect your returns when converted into your local currency.
  • The Fund invests in emerging markets where there is a greater risk of volatility due to political and economic uncertainties, restrictions on foreign investment, currency repatriation and currency fluctuations. Developing markets are typically less liquid which may result in large price movements to the Fund.
  • The Fund invests in a relatively concentrated number of companies and industries based in one sector. This focused strategy can produce high gains but can also lead to significant losses. The Fund may be less diversified than other investment funds.


Important Information
: This is a marketing communication and does not constitute a solicitation or offer to any person to buy or sell any related securities or financial instruments. Any opinions expressed may change. This document does not contain information material to the investment objectives or financial needs of the recipient. This document is not advice on legal, taxation or investment matters. Tax treatment depends on personal circumstances. Investors must rely on their own examination of the fund or seek advice. Investment may be restricted in other countries and as such, any individual who receives this document must make themselves aware of their respective jurisdiction and observe any restrictions.

A decision may be taken at any time to terminate the marketing of the Fund in any EEA Member State in which it is currently marketed. Shareholders in the affected EEA Member State will be given notification of any decision and provided the opportunity to redeem their interests in the Fund, free of any charges or deductions, for at least 30 working days from the date of the notification.

Investment in the Fund is an investment in the shares of the Fund and not in the underlying investments of the Fund. Further information about fund characteristics and any associated risks can be found in the Fund’s Key Information Document or Key Investor Information Document (“KID” or “KIID”), the Prospectus (and relevant Fund Supplement), the Articles of Association and the Annual and Semi-Annual Reports. Please refer to these documents before making any final investment decisions.  Investment in the Fund concerns shares of the Fund and not in the underlying investments of the Fund. These documents are available free of charge at Polar Capital Funds plc, Georges Court, 54-62 Townsend Street, Dublin 2, Ireland, via email by contacting Investor-Relations@polarcapitalfunds.com or at www.polarcapital.co.uk. The KID is available in the languages of all EEA member states in which the Fund is registered for sale; the Prospectus, Annual and Semi-Annual Reports and KIID are available in English.

The Fund promotes environmental and/or social characteristics and is classified as an Article 9 fund under the EU’s Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (“SFDR”). For more information, please see the Fund Supplement and Prospectus or by visiting www.polarcapital.co.uk.

ESG and sustainability characteristics are further detailed on the investment manager’s websites. - https://www.polarcapital.co.uk/ESG-and-Sustainability/Responsible-Investing/.

A summary of investor rights associated with investment in the Fund can be found here.

This document is provided and approved by both Polar Capital LLP and Polar Capital (Europe) SAS.

Polar Capital LLP is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (“FCA”) in the United Kingdom, and the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) in the United States. Polar Capital LLP’s registered address is 16 Palace Street, London, SW1E 5JD, United Kingdom.

Polar Capital (Europe) SAS is authorised and regulated by the Autorité des marchés financiers (AMF) in France. Polar Capital (Europe) SAS’s registered address is 18 Rue de Londres, Paris 75009, France.

Polar Capital LLP is a registered Investment Advisor with the SEC. Polar Capital LLP is the investment manager and promoter of Polar Capital Funds plc – an open-ended investment company with variable capital and with segregated liability between its sub-funds – incorporated in Ireland, authorised by the Central Bank of Ireland and recognised by the FCA. FundRock Management Company (Ireland) Limited acts as management company and is regulated by the Central Bank of Ireland. Registered Address: Percy Exchange, 8/34 Percy Place, Dublin 4, Ireland.

For UK investors: The Fund is recognised in the UK under the Overseas Funds Regime (OFR) but it is not a UK-authorised Fund. UK investors should be aware that they may not be able to refer a complaint against its Management Company or its Depositary to the UK’s Financial Ombudsman Service. Any claims for losses relating to the Management Company or the Depositary will not be covered by the Financial Services Compensation Scheme, in the event that either entity should become unable to meet its liabilities to investors. For information on the complaint process to the Management Company, please see the Country Supplement for this fund available at https://www.polarcapital.co.uk/.

Polar Capital (Switzerland) AG is the investment manager of the Fund and is authorised and regulated by the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority (“FINMA”). Registered address Klausstrasse 4, 8008, Zurich, Switzerland. FundRock Management Company (Ireland) Limited acts as management company and is regulated by the Central Bank of Ireland. Registered Address: Percy Exchange, 8/34 Percy Place, Dublin 4, Ireland.

Benchmark: The Fund is actively managed and uses the MSCI ACWI Net TR Index. The benchmark has been chosen as it is generally considered to be representative of the investment universe in which the Fund invests. The performance of the Fund is likely to differ from the performance of the benchmark as the holdings, weightings and asset allocation will be different. Investors should carefully consider these differences when making comparisons. Further information about the benchmark can be found here. The benchmark is provided by an administrator on the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) register of benchmarks which includes details of all authorised, registered, recognised and endorsed EU and third country benchmark administrators together with their national competent authorities.

Third-party Data: Some information contained herein has been obtained from third party sources and has not been independently verified by Polar Capital. Neither Polar Capital nor any other party involved in or related to compiling, computing or creating the data makes any express or implied warranties or representations with respect to such data (or the results to be obtained by the use thereof), and all such parties hereby expressly disclaim all warranties of originality, accuracy, completeness, merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose with respect to any data contained herein.

Country Specific Disclaimers: Please be aware that not every share class of every fund is available in all jurisdictions. Please be aware that not every share class of every fund is available in all jurisdictions. When considering an investment into the Fund, you should make yourself aware of the relevant financial, legal and tax implications. Neither Polar Capital LLP, Polar Capital Funds PLC or Polar Capital (Switzerland) AG shall be held liable for, and accept no liability for, the use or misuse of this document.

None

Artificial intelligence is often framed as a software revolution. In reality, its long-term impact will be governed by physics.

The first phase of AI has centred on training increasingly complex models inside energy-intensive data centres. The next phase – what we describe as physical AI – is about deploying digital intelligence into the real world: autonomous vehicles, humanoid robots, industrial automation systems and drones. In this implementation phase, algorithms must move motors, power actuators and operate continuously in dynamic environments. Unlike software, physical AI runs entirely on electricity.

Physical AI: Bridging AI with the real world
Physical Ai Bridging Artificial Intelligence With The Real World
Source: Polar Capital, December 2025. Images: Ateago, Agrobot, Amazon, Ehang, Figure, Intuitive Surgical, Keeta, Waymo.

For us, this is not a peripheral theme. It sits squarely at the intersection of electrification, energy efficiency and digitisation – the core pillars of what we see as the electricity megacycle.

From training models to moving machines

While AI infrastructure remains a powerful driver of electricity demand, we believe the more profound long-term shift lies in the physical world.

Physical AI represents installing digital intelligence into machines capable of interacting with unstructured environments. Humanoid robots are the most visible example. Unlike traditional fixed-purpose industrial robots, humanoids are general-purpose systems designed to replicate human dexterity and mobility. Initial uses are concentrated in manufacturing, warehousing and logistics, where tasks are repetitive and structured. Over time, applications are likely to extend into services, healthcare and retail.

Electricity demand growth from 2020
65% of all electricity demand growth is to come from new demand drivers by 2050

Electricity As The Cornerstone Of Multiple Megatrends
Source: Polar Capital estimates as at July 2023; BNEF for historical figures. Forecasts contained herein are for illustrative purposes only and does not constitute advice or a recommendation.

From an energy perspective, this shift is material. A current industrial humanoid consumes around 2kW during operation and can operate for only two to three hours per charge at peak load. While its peak power draw is lower than that of an electric vehicle, its average daily energy use may be higher due to longer operating hours.

Looking ahead, even under conservative efficiency assumptions, global humanoid electricity demand could reach 5,200TWh annually by 2050, exceeding current US electricity consumption. Physical AI therefore sits alongside data centres and electric vehicles as a structurally significant new source of power demand.

Economics and scale

The key question is not whether humanoids are technically feasible, but whether they are economically compelling.

Hardware costs are already declining. Average humanoid prices have fallen from more than $250,000 in 2022 to roughly $100,000-150,000 today. As scale increases and component costs fall further, payback periods are expected to shorten. Industrial humanoids currently offer payback periods of around six years, potentially declining to two years by 2030 as utilisation improves and costs fall.

Humanoid robot market to reach $5trn by 2050
1 billion units in use globally by 2050

Humanoid Robot Market To Reach $5 Trillion By 2050

Source: Polar Capital estimates, 17 January 2026; https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/SL.SRV.EMPL.ZS. Forecasts contained herein are for illustrative purposes only and does not constitute advice or a recommendation.

Under our long-term scenario, cumulative use could reach one billion units globally by 2050, implying a total addressable market of approximately $5trn. If robots can meaningfully replace or augment labour in sectors facing structural shortages and wage inflation, adoption could accelerate rapidly.

Crucially, energy efficiency remains central to the economics. Improvements in battery density, actuator performance, regenerative systems and power management directly enhance utilisation rates and total cost of ownership. In physical AI, electricity management is not a secondary consideration; it is foundational.

Geography and the manufacturing edge

While the US currently leads in frontier AI model development, physical AI may ultimately be a manufacturing-intensive competition.

China already commands significant share across robotics supply chains and benefits from deep industrial ecosystems and coordinated policy support. As humanoid production scales from thousands to millions of units, mass manufacturing capability could become a decisive advantage. For investors, this introduces both opportunity and geopolitical complexity. Selective exposure across enabling technologies rather than solely focusing on final assemblers may offer a more balanced approach.

Investing in the enablers

For the Polar Capital Smart Energy Fund, the opportunity lies less in the most visible robotics brands and more in the enabling ecosystem. Physical AI requires advanced power semiconductors, high-performance actuators, sensors, thermal management systems, optical communication infrastructure, batteries and grid-connected power equipment.

Semiconductor content per humanoid is estimated to be roughly 10x that of traditional industrial robots. The electrification intensity of physical AI is structurally higher than many legacy automation systems. Many of the companies supplying these components also serve adjacent end-markets such as data centres, electric vehicles and industrial automation, providing diversified exposure within a coherent thematic framework.

From bits to electrons

AI began as a computational story. It is becoming an energy story.

The digital intelligence being developed today will not remain confined to servers. It will inhabit machines that move, lift, assemble, inspect and transport. Every such machine will draw power from the grid. Every incremental efficiency gain in generation, transmission and conversion will matter.

Physical AI bridges software and hardware, algorithms and infrastructure. For long-term investors, the defining question is not whether automation advances, but how efficiently it is powered. In our view, the companies enabling that efficient electrification sit at the heart of one of the most compelling structural investment themes of the coming decades.

Related Fund

Risks:

  • Capital is at risk and there is no guarantee the Fund will achieve its objective. Investors should make sure their attitude towards risk is aligned with the risk profile of the Fund before investing.
  • Past performance is not a reliable guide to future performance. The value of investments may go down as well as up and you might get back less than you originally invested as there is no guarantee in place.
  • The value of a fund’s assets may be affected by uncertainties such as international political developments, market sentiment, economic conditions, changes in government policies, restrictions on foreign investment and currency repatriation, currency fluctuations and other developments in the laws and regulations of countries in which investment may be made. Please see the Fund’s Prospectus for details of all risks.
  • The fund is exposed to Sustainability risks which are environmental, social and governance factors that could have an actual or potential material negative impact on the value of the Fund and its risk factors.
  • The Fund invests in the shares of companies and share prices can rise or fall due to several factors affecting global stock markets.
  • The Fund uses derivatives which carry the risk of reduced liquidity, substantial loss, and increased volatility in adverse market conditions, such as failure amongst market participants.
  • The Fund invests in assets denominated in currencies other than the Fund's base currency. Changes in exchange rates may have a negative impact on the Fund's investments. If the share class currency is different from the currency of the country in which you reside, exchange rate fluctuations may affect your returns when converted into your local currency.
  • The Fund invests in emerging markets where there is a greater risk of volatility due to political and economic uncertainties, restrictions on foreign investment, currency repatriation and currency fluctuations. Developing markets are typically less liquid which may result in large price movements to the Fund.
  • The Fund invests in a relatively concentrated number of companies and industries based in one sector. This focused strategy can produce high gains but can also lead to significant losses. The Fund may be less diversified than other investment funds.


Important Information
: This is a marketing communication and does not constitute a solicitation or offer to any person to buy or sell any related securities or financial instruments. Any opinions expressed may change. This document does not contain information material to the investment objectives or financial needs of the recipient. This document is not advice on legal, taxation or investment matters. Tax treatment depends on personal circumstances. Investors must rely on their own examination of the fund or seek advice. Investment may be restricted in other countries and as such, any individual who receives this document must make themselves aware of their respective jurisdiction and observe any restrictions.

A decision may be taken at any time to terminate the marketing of the Fund in any EEA Member State in which it is currently marketed. Shareholders in the affected EEA Member State will be given notification of any decision and provided the opportunity to redeem their interests in the Fund, free of any charges or deductions, for at least 30 working days from the date of the notification.

Investment in the Fund is an investment in the shares of the Fund and not in the underlying investments of the Fund. Further information about fund characteristics and any associated risks can be found in the Fund’s Key Information Document or Key Investor Information Document (“KID” or “KIID”), the Prospectus (and relevant Fund Supplement), the Articles of Association and the Annual and Semi-Annual Reports. Please refer to these documents before making any final investment decisions.  Investment in the Fund concerns shares of the Fund and not in the underlying investments of the Fund. These documents are available free of charge at Polar Capital Funds plc, Georges Court, 54-62 Townsend Street, Dublin 2, Ireland, via email by contacting Investor-Relations@polarcapitalfunds.com or at www.polarcapital.co.uk. The KID is available in the languages of all EEA member states in which the Fund is registered for sale; the Prospectus, Annual and Semi-Annual Reports and KIID are available in English.

The Fund promotes environmental and/or social characteristics and is classified as an Article 9 fund under the EU’s Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (“SFDR”). For more information, please see the Fund Supplement and Prospectus or by visiting www.polarcapital.co.uk.

ESG and sustainability characteristics are further detailed on the investment manager’s websites. - https://www.polarcapital.co.uk/ESG-and-Sustainability/Responsible-Investing/.

A summary of investor rights associated with investment in the Fund can be found here.

This document is provided and approved by both Polar Capital LLP and Polar Capital (Europe) SAS.

Polar Capital LLP is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (“FCA”) in the United Kingdom, and the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) in the United States. Polar Capital LLP’s registered address is 16 Palace Street, London, SW1E 5JD, United Kingdom.

Polar Capital (Europe) SAS is authorised and regulated by the Autorité des marchés financiers (AMF) in France. Polar Capital (Europe) SAS’s registered address is 18 Rue de Londres, Paris 75009, France.

Polar Capital LLP is a registered Investment Advisor with the SEC. Polar Capital LLP is the investment manager and promoter of Polar Capital Funds plc – an open-ended investment company with variable capital and with segregated liability between its sub-funds – incorporated in Ireland, authorised by the Central Bank of Ireland and recognised by the FCA. FundRock Management Company (Ireland) Limited acts as management company and is regulated by the Central Bank of Ireland. Registered Address: Percy Exchange, 8/34 Percy Place, Dublin 4, Ireland.

For UK investors: The Fund is recognised in the UK under the Overseas Funds Regime (OFR) but it is not a UK-authorised Fund. UK investors should be aware that they may not be able to refer a complaint against its Management Company or its Depositary to the UK’s Financial Ombudsman Service. Any claims for losses relating to the Management Company or the Depositary will not be covered by the Financial Services Compensation Scheme, in the event that either entity should become unable to meet its liabilities to investors. For information on the complaint process to the Management Company, please see the Country Supplement for this fund available at https://www.polarcapital.co.uk/.

Polar Capital (Switzerland) AG is the investment manager of the Fund and is authorised and regulated by the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority (“FINMA”). Registered address Klausstrasse 4, 8008, Zurich, Switzerland. FundRock Management Company (Ireland) Limited acts as management company and is regulated by the Central Bank of Ireland. Registered Address: Percy Exchange, 8/34 Percy Place, Dublin 4, Ireland.

Benchmark: The Fund is actively managed and uses the MSCI ACWI Net TR Index. The benchmark has been chosen as it is generally considered to be representative of the investment universe in which the Fund invests. The performance of the Fund is likely to differ from the performance of the benchmark as the holdings, weightings and asset allocation will be different. Investors should carefully consider these differences when making comparisons. Further information about the benchmark can be found here. The benchmark is provided by an administrator on the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) register of benchmarks which includes details of all authorised, registered, recognised and endorsed EU and third country benchmark administrators together with their national competent authorities.

Third-party Data: Some information contained herein has been obtained from third party sources and has not been independently verified by Polar Capital. Neither Polar Capital nor any other party involved in or related to compiling, computing or creating the data makes any express or implied warranties or representations with respect to such data (or the results to be obtained by the use thereof), and all such parties hereby expressly disclaim all warranties of originality, accuracy, completeness, merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose with respect to any data contained herein.

Country Specific Disclaimers: Please be aware that not every share class of every fund is available in all jurisdictions. Please be aware that not every share class of every fund is available in all jurisdictions. When considering an investment into the Fund, you should make yourself aware of the relevant financial, legal and tax implications. Neither Polar Capital LLP, Polar Capital Funds PLC or Polar Capital (Switzerland) AG shall be held liable for, and accept no liability for, the use or misuse of this document.