Exclusive: Positron raises $230M Series B to take on Nvidia’s AI chips
TL;DR
Positron raised $230M in Series B funding to accelerate its AI chip deployment, challenging Nvidia. The startup's Atlas chip matches H100 GPU performance with lower power, focusing on inference for real-world AI applications.
Key Takeaways
- •Positron secured $230 million in Series B funding, bringing total capital to over $300 million, with investors including Qatar Investment Authority.
- •The startup aims to reduce reliance on Nvidia by offering high-speed memory chips for AI workloads, with its Atlas chip matching H100 GPU performance at less than a third of the power.
- •Positron focuses on inference hardware for running AI models in real-world applications, capitalizing on growing demand as businesses shift from model training to deployment.
- •Qatar is investing heavily in sovereign AI infrastructure, viewing compute capacity as key to global competitiveness and positioning itself as an AI hub in the Middle East.
- •The funding round reflects broader industry trends, with hyperscalers and AI firms like OpenAI seeking alternatives to Nvidia's chips due to dissatisfaction with recent offerings.
Semiconductor startup Positron has secured $230 million in Series B funding, TechCrunch has exclusively learned. The outfit plans to use the capital to speed up deployment of its high-speed memory chips, a critical component for the chips used for AI workloads, sources familiar with the matter told TechCrunch.
The round, which brought Positron to a $1 billion valuation, was co-led by Arena Private Wealth, Jump Trading, and Unless, with strategic investment from Qatar Investment Authority (QIA), the country’s sovereign wealth fund, which has been increasingly focused on building out AI infrastructure, the sources said.
The Reno-based startup’s Series B comes as hyperscalers and AI firms push to reduce their reliance on longstanding leader Nvidia. These firms include OpenAI, which, despite being one of Nvidia’s largest and most important customers, is reportedly unsatisfied with some of the firm’s latest AI chips and has been seeking alternatives since last year.
Meanwhile, Qatar, through QIA, has been accelerating a broader push into so-called “sovereign” AI infrastructure – a priority repeatedly underscored at Web Summit Qatar in Doha this week. Several sources told TechCrunch the country views compute capacity as critical to staying competitive on the global economic stage, and is positioning itself as a leading AI services hub in the Middle East, fueling interest in startups like Positron.
The strategy is already taking shape through major commitments, including a $20 billion AI infrastructure joint venture with Brookfield Asset Management that was announced in December.
Positron’s fundraise brings the three-year-old startup’s total capital raised to just over $300 million. The startup previously raised $75 million last year from investors including Valor Equity Partners, Atreides Management, DFJ Growth, Flume Ventures and Resilience Reserve.
The company claims its first-generation chip, Atlas, manufactured in Arizona, can match the performance of Nvidia’s H100 GPUs for less than a third of the power. Positron is focused on inference – computing needed to run AI models for real-world applications – rather than training large language models, positioning the company well as demand surges for inference hardware as businesses increasingly shift focus from building large models to deploying them at scale.
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With the funding, Positron aims to accelerate its roadmap to ship its next-generation Asimov silicon chip, targeting production in early 2027.
Sources tell TechCrunch that beyond its memory capabilities, Positron’s chips also perform strongly in high-frequency and video-processing workloads.
TechCrunch has reached out to Positron for more information.
This article has been updated to include updates from Positron about co-lead investors and valuation.
Correction: A previous version of this article misstated the date of QIA’s partnership with Brookfield.