Two $800 million rounds land on the same day — and for once, the cap table's actually worth reading. If you're just joining, inference and compute have been the drumbeat here. Baseten raised a $1.5 billion Series F at up to a $13 billion valuation, Runpod followed with a $100 million Series A at a billion, and Sharon AI closed $1.6 billion for NVIDIA-linked AI factory expansion. The common thread: enterprises pushing models out of the sandbox and into production. This is Startup Fundraising. Today — Aramco writing anchor checks, a chip startup waving a billion in signed contracts, and a robotic pharmacy kiosk that might be the sanest thing on the tape. Let's see which numbers actually hold up. If AI inference infrastructure mega-rounds matters to you, hit follow — we'll be back on it soon. Yogita Khatri, writing in The Block:
Erik Voorhees’ crypto-AI startup Venice AI has raised $65 million in a Series A funding round at a $1 billion equity valuation, led by Dragonfly. In return, investors received an 8.98% equity stake, a vesting grant of 1.5 million VVV tokens, and warrants to buy another 5 million VVV tokens over the next eight years, Voorhees said.
Venice AI hits a billion-dollar valuation off a $65 million Series A. Dragonfly leads, and The Block had it first — TechCrunch followed. Credit where it's due. If this round was clean, a billion equity valuation on $65 million in means Dragonfly's underwriting something like six or seven percent ownership. That's a rich Series A ticket. And the lead's a crypto fund — Dragonfly. Erik Voorhees's whole background is crypto, so the privacy-first framing tracks, but consumer AI isn't Dragonfly's usual lane. That tells you what story they're actually buying. Here's the tension, though. Venice runs inference locally so nothing leaves your device. That is the architectural opposite of the centralized scale everybody else is chasing today. Sixty-five million says the selling point is keeping the giant data center away from your data. So one bet says pool everything, one says leak nothing. Both priced like winners. This one's from Morningstar:
Together AI, the company making it dramatically cheaper and easier to run open source AI models at scale, today announced an $800 million Series C financing at an $8.3 billion post-money valuation. The round was led by Aramco Ventures, with participation from Vista Equity Partners, General Catalyst, Emergence Capital, NVIDIA, March Capital, Pegatron, S Ventures (SentinelOne) and others.
Together AI: $800 million Series C, $8.3 billion post-money — led by Aramco Ventures. And Aramco is the name that jumps off the page, because it wrote a strategic seed check into Hang Ten just days ago. Same firm, same week: one seed, one $800 million Series C. That's a deployment pattern worth saying out loud. A Saudi state-linked energy fund leading the anchor check on a U.S. open-source AI platform whose whole pitch is 'accessible to all.' Accessible to whom, exactly? A sovereign investor doesn't park a check forty times bigger than Hang Ten's for return alone. So what does Aramco want out of open-model inference at scale? Because I don't buy that it's just the IRR. Fair. But look at the co-investors — NVIDIA, Vista, General Catalyst, Pegatron. There's real supply-chain logic here. The DeepSeek-and-Nemotron cost story isn't nothing. The Next Web writes:
AI chip startup Etched has raised $800 million and revealed that its backers include trading firm Jane Street and VentureTech Alliance, a venture firm with a strategic partnership with TSMC. The company, which designs chips specifically for running AI models rather than training them, says it has signed one billion dollars in sales contracts and plans to start shipping to customers this summer.
Okay, finally, a round I can actually stress-test. Etched says it's sitting on a billion dollars in signed sales contracts and starts shipping this summer. At least there's a number to test. Read the structure before you get too excited, though. The bulk of this $800 million is a $500 million round Stripes led back in December at a $5 billion valuation. Today's disclosure rolls up tranches rather than marking one fresh close. Right — so the headline number's stitched together. And the contracts: are those recognized revenue, or a purchase-order stack dressed up to look like backlog? Sohu hasn't shipped yet. A signed contract on a chip you haven't delivered is still just a promise; it doesn't hit the P&L. Here's the part I'd underline: Jane Street separately led a previously unannounced round and is in for north of $100 million, per Bloomberg. So the Jane Street name is carrying more than logo value — they actually led something. That's a different weight class than tagging along. And VentureTech Alliance, the TSMC-linked fund, brings more than cash — it points to fab access. You don't ship transformer chips this summer without a foundry that likes you. That's a supply-chain bet riding alongside the check. Which is why the investor roster reads like a Nobel afterparty — Hinton, Fei-Fei Li, Druckenmiller. Names that validate the science. But the round that matters for shipping is the one with a foundry attached. This one's from SiliconANGLE:
Queue, a company building an autonomous “robotic” pharmacy kiosk that dispenses medication, today announced that it has raised $12.6 million in seed funding led by AlleyCorp. The company is launching today with $18.6 million under its belt, which includes today’s seed round and $6 million in pre-seed funding led by Riot Ventures less than a year ago.
After two $800 million AI infrastructure rounds this morning, here's a company with a physical product that dispenses actual pills. Queue — $12.6 million seed led by AlleyCorp, launching today with $18.6 million total. And note the clean lineage — $6 million pre-seed from Riot Ventures under a year ago, now AlleyCorp leading the seed. A named lead at every stage. Refreshingly boring. The claim I want to poke is the 96% lower cost than a traditional pharmacy. Sure, when the machine stocks 280 common medications and skips the messy edge cases. The margin's easy when you leave the hard cases to someone else. The CTO says pharmacy in America is 'structurally broken' and this is a 'complete reimagining.' Big words for a QR-code kiosk. But at seed, the words are cheap and the hardware's real, so I'll allow it. For me, the whole thing hinges on one signature — which retail chain or health system agrees to bolt these to its walls? Deploy them in rural gaps and hospitals, sure, but somebody has to say yes at scale. I'd chase that before I cared about the raise. Here's Upstarts Media:
Building software for the pre-construction phase of such projects – seemingly a small piece of the puzzle – didn’t seem like a high-octane startup niche. But as the founders spoke to more potential customers, they realized that the services involved ran into the millions of dollars – and involved much more of a challenge than initially met the eye.
Build — $8.5 million from Index, with OpenAI's CFO writing a personal check. That last bit is the whole story to me. It's a different kind of anchor than we've had all week. Aramco leading Together AI, a TSMC-linked fund on Etched — those are institutional strategic bets. Here, an operating executive is putting his own money on data-center pre-construction software. And it tells you exactly what the bet is. OpenAI needs data centers built faster. The CFO backing a company that shaves months off pre-construction? That's supply chain with a personal check attached. The founders themselves said the services run into the millions per project. The pitch: take a cut of speeding up a nine-figure build, rather than selling another stack of SaaS seats. U.K. government's already a customer. Which is the part I want tested. An architect and an 11x alum met a skydiver over a drop zone and decided pre-construction was the niche. Cute origin story. The thing I'd test: can they price on outcomes without owning the risk when the build slips? If you track startup capital markets, you might like Infrastructure Secondaries Daily: LP stake sales, GP-led continuation vehicles, and discount-to-NAV pricing, every day. It's a sharp lens on liquidity and spreads, wherever you listen to podcasts.
We'll be watching Etched's planned Sohu inference-chip shipments to customers this summer.
You'll find links to every story we covered today in the show notes. If something sparked a follow-up question, that's the place to start reading.
That's Startup Fundraising for today. This is a Lantern Podcast.