Databricks Inc. is exploring a new funding round that could value the fast-growing artificial intelligence and data software company at more than $130 billion, according to a report from The Information.
The negotiations highlight continued investor appetite for AI-related firms, even as high-profile critics warn of overheating in parts of the sector.
If completed, the capital raise would represent a roughly 30% jump in Databricks’ valuation from its September financing round, which was backed by notable Silicon Valley investors including Andreessen Horowitz and Insight Partners.
The company has not yet signed a term sheet, but the additional funds would reportedly be used for hiring and acquisitions, the report added.
AI valuations climb despite bubble concerns
The reported talks emerge at a time when AI markets face growing skepticism from some corners of the financial world.
Investors and executives across the industry have committed potentially trillions of dollars to data centers, chip development, and AI infrastructure, even though a broadly adopted mass-market application and a clear pathway to long-term profitability have yet to materialize.
Signs of caution have surfaced in recent weeks.
Peter Thiel’s hedge fund, Thiel Macro LLC, disclosed that it sold its Nvidia Corp. stake during the third quarter, joining a wave of investors locking in profits from the dominant AI chipmaker.
SoftBank Group Corp., which had also amassed Nvidia shares, revealed its full exit last week.
Hedge fund manager Michael Burry has become one of the most vocal skeptics of the current AI rally, unveiling bearish positions against both Nvidia and software firm Palantir Technologies Inc.
Meanwhile, a series of large, interconnected deals between chip manufacturers, AI startups, and data center operators has raised concerns that segments of the industry may be artificially propping up demand.
Investors continue pursuing strategic AI bets
Despite the cautionary signals, competition among investors for positions in high-potential AI startups remains strong.
From the US to Japan, venture capital firms and sovereign funds continue to back companies aiming to become the next generation of AI infrastructure leaders.
Databricks stands out as one of the largest private players operating in the cloud and data software segment, an industry in which incumbents such as Oracle Corp. and Snowflake Inc. have long held influence.
The San Francisco-based startup provides tools that allow customers to analyze large volumes of data and build AI applications across complex datasets sourced from multiple environments.
The company has also been expanding into transactional database technology, systems designed to capture and process ongoing business activity in real time.
This move places Databricks more directly in competition with software and cloud providers that have dominated the market for decades.
Growing competition across the cloud and data landscape
Databricks’ platform runs on major cloud infrastructures, including Microsoft’s Azure and Amazon Web Services, allowing the startup to operate alongside, and increasingly against, some of the industry’s most powerful companies.
As the firm scales its offerings, it is competing more actively with Snowflake, a longtime rival, while also brushing up against cloud vendors such as Microsoft.
With investor attention still fixed on companies enabling the next phase of AI development, Databricks’ fundraising discussions underscore both the enthusiasm and the uncertainty surrounding the sector.
Whether the company ultimately secures a valuation above $130 billion could serve as a fresh indicator of how much confidence remains in the AI growth narrative as skepticism builds around the industry’s long-term economics.
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