DeepSeek’s $7.4B round tests founder control at AI scale
Original: DeepSeek raises $7.4 billion at over $50 billion valuation, founder keeps control: Report View original →
DeepSeek’s reported $7.4 billion first outside funding round is not just another AI valuation headline. It would make the Hangzhou company China’s most valuable AI startup while testing how much capital a frontier-model lab can raise without giving ordinary investors control.
Moneycontrol, carrying Reuters copy, reports that The Information said DeepSeek raised more than 50 billion yuan, or about $7.40 billion, at a valuation above $50 billion. The article was published on June 16, 2026 at 12:04 IST, inside the 72-hour window for this curation. Reuters noted it could not immediately verify the report and that DeepSeek could not immediately be reached for comment.
The structure is the standout detail. Most investors are reportedly putting money into a limited partnership managed by CEO Liang Wenfeng rather than directly into DeepSeek. They are also said to face a five-year lock-up and no voting rights. China’s National Artificial Intelligence Industry Investment Fund is the exception, investing directly in DeepSeek while retaining voting rights and freedom from the lock-up.
The size of the round reflects the cost of staying in the model race. DeepSeek became a national AI champion after V3 and R1 challenged assumptions about how much money and compute were needed to build competitive models. But maintaining that position requires infrastructure, product revenue, agent tools, and closer ties to domestic chip suppliers as export controls keep shaping access to advanced hardware.
If the round closes as reported, the next question is strategic rather than financial. DeepSeek has to balance its open-weight reputation with the need to monetize, fund compute, and satisfy backers who accepted limited governance rights. That makes the company a key test case for China’s AI capital stack.
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