ECARX Holdings Inc. said it has entered a definitive agreement to acquire the Flyme software portfolio for RMB 1.8 billion, roughly $266 million. The announcement replaces the board's earlier April 2026 approval to explore a minority-stake investment and commits ECARX to purchasing the full software business.
The transaction involves the acquisition of 100% of the equity in a newly formed unit, Hubei Qiguang Technology Co., Ltd. That entity will house Flyme Auto - an intelligent cockpit operating system already in production on more than 2 million vehicles - and Flyme OS, a cross-device operating system that the seller says rests on over 15 years of continuous development.
Company leadership emphasized the strategic nature of the deal. Founder and CEO Ziyu Shen characterized the agreement as "a defining moment for ECARX's software-defined vehicle vision." That language signals a shift from an exploratory minority stake toward full ownership of a software stack ECARX views as core to its platform ambitions.
Investors have focused closely on how the purchase will be financed. ECARX expects to fund approximately 70% of the consideration with syndicated loans arranged through Chinese commercial banks on 10-year terms. The remaining 30% will come from internal sources, including use of existing loan offsets to DreamSmart Group. That leverage-heavy structure is central to market assessments of the transaction's merits.
An independent valuation performed as of May 31, 2026 placed the equity value of the target at RMB 1.824 billion, which management says is broadly consistent with the agreed price. ECARX also indicated that management accounts show the Flyme business achieved profitability in 2026 - a detail that has been cited by company executives and that helps support the underlying rationale for the price despite the substantial debt financing.
Market context has been constructive: the Nasdaq composite rose 1.9% on the session and the S&P 500 gained 1.1%, lifting sentiment across many technology-oriented names. Against that backdrop, ECARX shares edged up 0.1% in pre-open trading following the announcement.
The company competes in the automotive computing platform arena alongside peers such as Innoviz Technologies and Foresight Autonomous Holdings. Management frames the Flyme purchase as a way to deepen ECARX's software layer at a time when automakers are accelerating a transition toward embedded native operating systems rather than relying on smartphone-mirroring approaches.
While the announcement provides clarity by converting months of exploratory language into a concrete, fully scoped acquisition, the deal is subject to closing conditions that have not yet been satisfied. ECARX noted that the transaction still requires customary due diligence sign-off and the completion of intellectual property transfer formalities before the deal can close. These steps, alongside the transaction's leverage profile, have contributed to the modest nature of the share-price reaction.
What to watch next
- Progress on due diligence and IP transfer milestones required to close the transaction.
- Details of the syndicated financing documents and any covenants that could affect ECARX's balance sheet flexibility.
- Integration plans for Flyme Auto and Flyme OS into ECARX's existing automotive computing platform offerings.