Speaking of China…the Hangzhou AI startup DeepSeek is reportedly on the cusp of raising about 50 billion yuan (or approx. $7.4 billion) in its first funding round.
According
to Reuters, investors include Tencent (10 billion yuan), the lithium-ion battery king CATL (5 billion yuan), and founder Liang Wenfeng, who “committed 20 billion yuan of his own money.”
The fundraise may yet include investments from gaming developer NetEase, retailer
JD.com, and China's national artificial intelligence fund, according to the report.
The round is believed to value the company between 350 billion yuan and 400 billion yuan—that is, between $52 billion and $59 billion.
DeepSeek, you’ll recall, shocked the world last year when its inexpensive V3 and R1 models challenged the Silicon Valley notion that extraordinary sums of money were necessary to produce cutting-edge large language models, or LLMs.
Amid the U.S.-China AI arms race, though, DeepSeek is just one gear in a national machine that aims to power a self-sufficient AI industry in China.
Really, though, the competition begins at home. As OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, and Microsoft duke it out in the U.S., Alibaba, ByteDance, DeepSeek, and Tencent are doing the same in China.
If and when the round closes, expect DeepSeek’s new capital to pay for more computing infrastructure and talent—much the same as its peers, on both sides of the Pacific.
—AN