This is a hot season for chip investments. Capital is pouring into startups in the semiconductor and AI high-efficiency computing component sectors, with many companies aiming to challenge industry giants like Nvidia securing sky-high valuations. Edge AI, a specialized AI chip company founded just four years ago by several Harvard University dropouts, announced an $800 million funding round this Tuesday. Last week, it was reported that chip startups Sambanova and Axelite were each advancing new funding rounds worth hundreds of millions of dollars.
The next company attracting significant capital interest is the 11-year-old Ayar Labs, a research-founded firm specializing in ultra-high-speed interconnect devices for AI chips. According to a person familiar with the matter, the startup is in talks for a new funding round of at least $200 million, with a post-money valuation set to rise significantly from the $3.75 billion from a round a few months ago (a valuation that already included previously raised funds).
The per-share price in the new round is about one-third higher than the previous round. The Santa Clara, California-based company is expected to reach a valuation in the range of $50 billion in the latest talks, though a final valuation figure has not been confirmed.
Nvidia, Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), and Intel's venture capital arm have all invested in the company. Its technology is now integrated and compatible with Nvidia's products. Its board members include Intel Chairman Craig Barrett and former Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger, who now serves as a general partner at venture capital firm Preground Capital.
Two major capital exit events have ignited investor enthusiasm for betting on the chip sector to seek high returns: one is Nvidia's $20 billion deal to acquire AI inference chip maker Grock through a licensing transaction, and the other is Cerebras's IPO at a $56 billion valuation.
Ayar Labs's products abandon traditional copper wire transmission, adopting high-speed optical interconnect technology to enable massive, high-speed data transfer between AI chips and memory chips within data centers. Currently, a group of photonics technology companies are betting on the industry's transition from copper interconnects to laser-based optical interconnects. Ayar is a representative example, alongside peers like Lightmatter and Celestia, the latter of which was acquired by Marvell Technology for approximately $3.3 billion in February of this year.
As AI tasks become more complex and computing power demand continues to surge, optical interconnect technology, which can significantly improve data center operational efficiency, is highly favored by the market. Startups positioned in this field have consequently become hot investment targets for capital.
In this funding round, Milwaukee-based asset manager Artisan Partners, New York's Liberty Street Fund, and ARK Investment Management, led by Cathie Wood, have all engaged in talks to participate. The round has not yet been finalized, and transaction terms may still be subject to change.
Comments