CAE
All Research

Huaru

Huaru shows that China's serious simulation threat is not only civil aviation or low-altitude. The company spans land, sea, air, Rocket Force, electromagnetic, and C4ISR-oriented simulation while maintaining high R&D intensity.

3 sources

Company Snapshot

HeadquartersBeijing, Haidian District, China
OwnershipPublic company listed in China
Size564 employees; 190 R&D staff (2024)
MarketsDefense simulation, test and appraisal, battlefield environment, cross-domain training

Leadership Watch

Han ChaoResponsible leader and legal representative

Platforms and Offerings

CoverageLand, sea, air, Rocket Force, electromagnetic, C4ISR domains
ProductsXSimVerse, XSimStudio V7, unmanned-aircraft simulation training system
ScopeEquipment training, mission simulation, test support, battlefield environments
UsePrimarily defense
C4ISR = Command, Control, Communications, Computers, Intelligence, Surveillance, and ReconnaissanceUAV = Unmanned Aerial VehicleCMF = Civil-Military Fusion

Assessment

StrengthsBroad domain coverage, public-company disclosure trail, deep defense relevance, very high R&D intensity
Weaknesses2024 was difficult -- revenue down, losses widening under procurement pressure
DirectionDeepen as multi-domain simulation actor with AI and systems relevance; absorb procurement volatility