Chinese AI Startup DeepSeek Raises External Capital for First Time
Hangzhou-based DeepSeek seeks to sell up to 3% equity to establish valuation benchmark, retain talent amid poaching competition
L'essentiel
- DeepSeek, a Hangzhou-based AI startup spin-off from hedge fund High-Flyer, has begun its first external fundraising round, seeking to sell no more than 3% of equity.
- The move aims to establish a market valuation benchmark and provide employee stock option clarity to retain talent against aggressive poaching by well-funded rivals.
- State-backed funds including Big Fund III affiliates are expected to participate, with estimated valuation potentially exceeding US$100 billion.
Résumé généré par IA
Pourquoi c'est important
DeepSeek operates in China's competitive AI landscape where well-funded rivals are aggressively recruiting talent, prompting the company to establish a clear valuation for employee stock options to reduce departures.
Chinese artificial intelligence start-up DeepSeek has begun raising external capital for the first time, but is keeping its initial fundraising round deliberately small to limit equity dilution while retaining key talent, according to people familiar with the matter. The Hangzhou-based company, a spin-off from hedge fund High-Flyer, is seeking to sell no more than 3 per cent of its equity, said three investors with direct knowledge of the plans, who requested anonymity as the information is private. DeepSeek is not in urgent need of outside capital. Instead, the round was intended to establish a market benchmark for its valuation, giving employees greater clarity on the worth of their stock options – a move aimed at stemming departures amid aggressive poaching by well-funded rivals, the Hangzhou and Beijing-based investors said. DeepSeek did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Wednesday. Large state-backed funds were expected to participate, for example, the AI-focused affiliates of China's so-called "Big Fund III", one of the investors said, adding that DeepSeek's estimated valuation could, in fact, exceed US$100 billion. DeepSeek's fundraising was first reported by The Information, which said the company was seeking to raise at least US$300 million at a valuation of at least US$10 billion. The company is being highly selective in the round, according to another investor based in Hangzhou, adding that DeepSeek is prioritising state-backed and industrial investors – including local government guidance funds and affiliated platforms – favouring those that can provide strategic resources such as AI infrastructure over purely financial capital, the investor said.
À surveiller
Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes
DeepSeek will complete its fundraising round within the next 2-3 months
Probable · En quelques mois
Additional Chinese AI companies will seek similar state-backed funding to compete with DeepSeek's valuation benchmark
Possible · En quelques mois
Questions ouvertes
- What specific valuation will DeepSeek ultimately achieve?
- Which specific state-backed funds will participate?
- How will this impact competition in the Chinese AI sector?






