A €480M insurance round that isn't AI, and a GPU rental shop that just hit unicorn status on its Series A. Buckle up. If you're just joining, enterprise AI buyers are pushing more model work into production, and investors keep funding the inference layer under it. Earlier this week, Baseten raised a $1.5 billion Series F — led by Sands Capital and Wellington Management, at a valuation up to $13 billion. That set the marker for how aggressively late-stage capital is pricing AI-serving infrastructure. And today, for once, I get to root for the boring ones — health insurance and GPU racks. This is Startup Fundraising. Let's do the math out loud. If AI inference infrastructure mega-rounds matters to you, hit follow — we'll be back on it soon. The Next Web writes:
Alan, the French health insurance company, has raised €480m($550m). The deal values the Paris firm at €5.5bn ($6.3bn). Dutch investor Prosus led the round, in one of Europe’s largest non-AI raises of the year. The financing is a Series G. Existing backers Teachers’ Venture Growth and Index Ventures joined, alongside new investor Dara Holdings.
All week, the tape's been AI swallowing everything. Then a French health insurer punches through with €480M at a €5.5bn valuation, led by Prosus. The Next Web calls it one of Europe's largest non-AI raises of the year, and honestly, that framing matters. Okay — this is the kind of business I keep saying I'd root for. Real insurance customers, real revenue, a prevention model in an actual app. Genuinely impressed for about ten seconds. Then the math kicks in. They raised €100M at €5bn three months ago. Now roughly €500M more pushes it to €5.5bn — back-to-back raises in a single quarter, for an insurer. What changed in twelve weeks to justify lifting the number? And remember, insurers don't close like software firms — this still needs France's financial regulators to sign off. The valuation bump landed before the paperwork did. And the moat is 'AI-driven prevention' — which, come on, every large insurer in Europe is running that exact playbook. Prosus led, so somebody underwrote a path to profitability at €5.5bn. I want to see it. From Kyt Dotson at SiliconANGLE:
Artificial intelligence developer-centric cloud provider Runpod Inc. announced Wednesday that it has raised $100 million in early-stage funding, pushing the valuation of the company to $1 billion. The Series A funding, led by Summit Partners, brings the company’s total funding to $122 million across multiple rounds, including a seed round in May 2024 co-led by Intel Capital and Dell Technologies Capital.
Runpod's at a billion-dollar valuation off a $100M Series A, per SiliconANGLE — total funding just crossed $122M with this round. So the whole company has been built with roughly an eighth of what it's now worth on paper. And the lead here is Summit Partners, not one of the usual top-three logos flexing. Someone sat down and underwrote a billion-dollar margin story on a GPU rental marketplace where AWS, Google, and CoreWeave are all pricing each other into the ground. Same inference-infrastructure neighborhood as Baseten's mega-round — Runpod's just joined the unicorn club at a tenth of the headline. CEO Zhen Lu's pitch is one dashboard from first experiment to production traffic, not just hosted inference. Two million developers, 20 billion inference requests served — okay, that's real usage, I'll give them that. But if two companies in this exact GPU-rental layer are both selling 'cheaper than the hyperscalers,' they can't both defend these numbers forever. Where does Runpod's price floor actually sit if CoreWeave undercuts them next quarter? And the seed was co-led by Intel Capital and Dell Technologies Capital back in May 2024 — strategics that would want this to scale. The part I like is how easy the revenue model is to read: developers pay for GPU-hours, and you can see the dollars move. Right, that's the contrast I keep coming back to — actual paying customers metering real compute, not a logo slide of 'partners.' The mechanism's clean. The billion-dollar number on $122M raised is what I want them defending in two years. GeekWire, with John Cook:
Virginia-based AI startup Trase is expanding its presence in the Seattle region, with plans to grow from about 20 employees in the area today to as many as 100 in the coming months. The 56-person company this week publicly launched and raised a$107 million seed round to focus on highly regulated industries like healthcare. Arch Venture Partners led the seed round.
A $107 million seed round. Read that back to me. At that size, 'seed' sounds like a Series B wearing a name tag that says, 'hi, I'm new here.' Arch led it, and GeekWire frames it as one of the largest single seed raises on record for a healthcare AI startup. Fifty-six people today, twenty in Seattle, scaling to a hundred — so a real chunk of that check goes into building the org, not just product. And the pitch is 'AI adoption is faltering in complex regulated industries.' Sure — because it's hard. Hiring an AWS engineering leader as president doesn't make HIPAA disappear. What's the compute burn before there's a single live deployment in an actual hospital? That's the line I'd underline — Sridharan came up through AWS, Google Cloud, and Microsoft. Pedigree's real. But pedigree at $107M pre-revenue means you've sold the resume, not the contract. Fortune's Ben Weiss has this one. Framework Ventures closed its fourth fund — $400 million, per Ben Weiss at Fortune — and the word to watch in the headline is 'beyond.' A crypto-native firm is now deploying beyond crypto. So which is it — are they selling a crypto track record into AI and deeptech, or is 'expanding beyond crypto' just the polite version of admitting the crypto thesis needed a wider net? That's the gap LPs actually price. You sign up for a crypto mandate, you wake up to a generalist. Re-up rates punish exactly that distance between what was pitched and what gets deployed. And $400 million for Fund IV isn't nothing — a mid-tier specialist still closing real money cuts against the idea that LP cash only flows to the three biggest brands. But once the mandate pivots, the read gets messier. If you track startup capital, you might also like Infrastructure Secondaries Daily. It covers LP stake sales, GP-led continuation vehicles, and discount-to-NAV pricing every day — useful context on private-market liquidity. Find it wherever you listen to podcasts.
Next, we’re watching Alan’s Series G. It still has to clear regulatory sign-off, including from France’s financial authorities, so we’ll track it as it moves through the process.
Links to every story we covered today are in the show notes, if you want to dig further into anything that caught your ear.
That’s Startup Fundraising for today. This is a Lantern Podcast.