iRobot, the maker of the Roomba vacuum cleaner, filed for bankruptcy protection on Sunday and is pursuing a buyout from its primary manufacturer in China after the company's acquisition by Amazon was blocked over a year ago on antitrust grounds.
iRobot first raised concerns about its ability to remain in business in March and filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in a Delaware bankruptcy court on Sunday as it faces competition from lower-priced rivals and new U.S. tariffs. It now plans to go private after its purchase by Picea Robotics, a China-based firm that is its primary manufacturer.
The bankruptcy filing follows the termination of iRobot's proposed $1.4 billion acquisition by Amazon, which was abandoned in January 2024 amid a probe by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) – led by Lina Khan – and European regulators. The FTC's antitrust investigation was focused on Amazon's ability to favor its own products over its rivals.
iRobot co-founder and former CEO Colin Angle told FOX Business in an interview that the FTC's decision to oppose the merger struck him as "wrong-minded" and harmful in retrospect.
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