Nvidia-Backed Data-Center Firm Nscale Valued at $14.6 Billion in Latest Funding Round
By Reuters | 09 Mar, 2026
Nscale data-centers use Nvidia GPUs to provide large-scale AI compute to clients like OpenAI and Microsoft.
Nvidia-backed artificial intelligence group Nscale was valued at $14.6 billion after raising $2 billion in its latest funding round, the British company said on Monday.
The Series C funding round was led by Norway's Aker and 8090 Industries, and included Nvidia, Citadel, Dell, Jane Street, among others, the firm said in a statement.
Former Meta executives Nick Clegg and Sheryl Sandberg, and former Yahoo President Susan Decker will join the board of the AI firm, the company said.
The funding round comes ahead of the AI group's preparations for an initial public offering, for which Nscale Global has hired Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan as underwriters, sources told Reuters earlier this year.
The timeline for the potential listing has not yet been set, the sources had said.
Founded in 2024, Nscale owns and operates its own data centres, graphic processing units (GPUs), and software stack to deliver large-scale, GPU-powered AI compute.
The new funding will help it expand its data‑centre capacity to meet soaring demand for AI computing from customers, including Microsoft and OpenAI.
(Reporting by Ruchika Khanna in Bengaluru; Editing by Harikrishnan Nair)
Recent Articles
- US on Track to Break World Cup Attendance Record Despite High Ticket Prices
- S. Korea Coach Warns Team Against Complacency Before South Africa Match
- Senate Joins House to Require Trump to Seek Approval for Iran Hostilities
- US Consumers Favor Homebuying over Renting for First Time Since 2023
- US Manufacturing Rises but Factory Employment Falls to Six-Year Low
- Meta Launches Cheaper AI Smart Glasses Starting at $299
- How the Philippines Went from an Asian Economic Leader to Laggard
- Pakistan May See Economic Dividend from Its Role As Peacekeeper
- KOSPI Plunges Nearly 10% After Regulator Warns on Leveraged ETFs
- Asian Refiners See Little Room for Iranian Oil, Leaving China as Key Buyer After US Waiver
