(Bloomberg) — Data center builder Firmus Technologies Pty raised $505 million in an investment round led by Coatue Management LLC, part of a global push to finance artificial intelligence infrastructure.
The deal values the Australian startup at $5.5 billion, Firmus said Monday. Nvidia Corp., the top maker of AI accelerator chips, also participated in the round.
The cash will go toward rapidly deploying AI hardware based on forthcoming Nvidia computer technology in the Asia-Pacific region. Firmus, which has data center projects in Australia and Singapore, has raised $1.35 billion in the last six months, including this latest transaction.
Firmus is leading an effort called Southgate, a plan to build data center capacity in Australia that runs on renewable energy, starting with a site in Tasmania. That facility will house computers based on 36,000 Nvidia accelerator chips after its first two rounds of technology deployments. The powerful processors help develop and run AI models by bombarding them with data.
Nvidia, often in partnership with venture capital investors, has invested billions of dollars in AI companies. It’s aiming to help cultivate an industry that has already fueled explosive sales growth and turned Nvidia into the world’s most valuable business.
As with the Firmus funding, Nvidia is backing companies that also buy its products. Some investors have expressed concern about the circular nature of these deals, something Nvidia has pushed back on.
Coatue, which has more than $70 billion in assets under management, has made its own push into AI technology. The New York-based investment firm has backed computing infrastructure as well as service providers like OpenAI and Anthropic PBC.
Firmus is using Vera Rubin DSX, a design provided by Nvidia for building what it calls AI factories. Vera Rubin is the code name for a new generation of chips and computers that Nvidia will begin shipping in the second half of this year.
The Australian effort dovetails with a push by Nvidia Chief Executive Officer Jensen Huang into what’s called sovereign AI, the building of local data centers that allow countries and companies to keep their information within national boundaries. Huang has touted that as a key area of growth for the Santa Clara, California-based company.
Firmus said previously that the Southgate project has attracted a global hyperscaler customer — a term used to describe the largest cloud computing companies. Blackstone Inc., the world’s biggest alternative-asset manager, also has helped finance the effort.