AI chip startup Groq confirmed on Wednesday it raised $750 million in fresh funding with a $6.9 billion money valuation.
This broke the rumored numbers when the word leaked in July when Groq was rising. At the time, reports suggest that pay increases would be around $600 million at an valuation of about $600 million.
Groq, which also sells data center computing power, previously raised $640 million in August 2024 at a $2.8 billion valuation, which was more than doubled in about a year. Pitchbook estimates that Groq has now raised more than $3 billion so far.
GROQ was a hot product as AI chip maker Nvidia is working to break the chokeholds it has had on the tech industry. GROQ's chips are not GPUs, but rather graphics processing units that generally provide power to AI systems. Instead, GROQ calls them LPUs (language processing units) and hardware is called inference engines. This is a specialized computer optimized to run AI models quickly and efficiently.
The product is for developers and businesses that are available either as cloud services or as on-premises hardware clusters. On-prem hardware is a server rack with an integrated stack of hardware/software nodes. Both cloud and ONPREM hardware run open versions of popular models like Meta, Deepseek, Qwen, Mistral, Google, and Openai. GROQ says that its products maintain or in some cases improve AI performance at significantly less cost than alternatives.
Jonathan Ross, founder of Groq, has a pedigree that is particularly relevant to this work. Ross previously developed tensor processing unit chips on Google. This is a specialized processor designed for machine learning tasks. The TPU was announced in 2016, and the same year the Groq emerged from stealth. TPU still powers the AI service of Google Cloud.
When I spoke to TechCrunch a year ago, GROQ says it is bolstering AI apps from over 2 million developers from 356,000 developers.
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The new round was led by the disruptive investment firms, with additional funds from Blackrock, Neubergerbermann and Deutsche Telekom Capital Partners. Existing investors including Samsung, Cisco, D1 and Altimeter also took part in the round.