Elon Musk’s AI company xAI has closed an upsized Series E round that raised $20 billion. The sum surpassed an earlier $15 billion target. xAI said on Tuesday the money will accelerate model development, expand computing infrastructure and fund research.
The round drew a mix of traditional investors and strategic tech backers, including Fidelity Management and Resource Company, Qatar’s sovereign wealth fund, and Valour Equity Partners, the private investment company of Musk’s long-time friend and former Doge member Antonio Gracias.
Nvidia and Cisco Investments joined as strategic investors, signalling deeper hardware and networking ties.
Elon Musk
xAI confirmed the fresh investment will fund a rapid expansion of its data centres. The company is already running huge GPU clusters, and it told investors it is scaling to what it calls over one million H100 GPU equivalents. That claim underscores the explicit aim: owning more of the raw compute that underpins large-scale model training.
Investors appear to be buying a new financing model. Reports describe a structure that mixes equity with debt in special purpose vehicles (SPV) These vehicles would buy Nvidia processors and lease them to xAI. The effect is to shift some capital risk off the company’s balance sheet while ensuring a guaranteed buyer for chips. That arrangement could become a template for other AI firms seeking vast GPU capacity without shouldering equivalent upfront hardware exposure.
Nvidia’s participation will be watched closely. As xAI rents or purchases more of Nvidia’s top-end H100s, Nvidia gains near-term demand and a long-term commercial anchor. For Cisco, the logic is about networks and systems: data centre interconnects and routing at this scale are critical. Both investments, therefore, are strategic as much as financial.
The round also shifts xAI’s market profile. Financial reporting suggests the raise has pushed its implied valuation substantially higher. That changes the competitive chessboard among major model developers. xAI now has both capital and a hardware supply pathway to challenge incumbents such as OpenAI and Google’s model teams.
Yet the splashy round arrives amid reputational and regulatory strains. xAI’s Grok chatbot has been criticised for producing harmful and non-consensual deepfakes, drawing investigations and public rebuke in Europe.
Grok
French ministers are said to have reported Grok’s output to prosecutors on Friday and referred the episode to media regulators to decide whether the images violate the European Union’s Digital Services Act.Similarly
Similarly, Liz Kendall, the UK’s technology secretary, also condemned Grok’s deepfakes on Tuesday as “appalling and unacceptable”, calling on the British regulator to take action.
These controversies complicate the company’s path to mainstream enterprise deals and could invite closer scrutiny of how models are trained and deployed. Investors will be weighing expansion against the cost of regulatory headwinds.
For the market, the deal matters on three levels. First, it proves there is still investor appetite for scale-focused AI ventures. Second, it binds leading suppliers into the economics of training at an unprecedented scale. Third, it raises fresh questions about governance, safety and who controls the infrastructure of powerful AI systems.
How xAI deploys this fresh capital will test whether big cheques can translate into safer, commercially useful AI or merely a larger arms race for compute, only time can tell.
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