DeepSeek Seeks First Outside Funding at $10B Valuation


TL;DR

  • First Outside Round: DeepSeek is in talks to raise $300 million or more at a valuation above $10 billion.
  • Strategic Reversal: The move marks a sharp shift for founder Liang Wenfeng, who long positioned DeepSeek as a research-first lab.
  • Pressure Points: Fundraising talks coincide with a delayed V4 flagship, a talent drain to Xiaomi and ByteDance, and costly Huawei chip compatibility work.
  • Valuation Gap: DeepSeek’s $10 billion target sits at a tiny fraction of OpenAI’s roughly $852 billion and Anthropic’s $380 billion valuations.
  • Open Questions: Talks remain unclosed, with governance terms, investor identity, and final valuation all pending as V4 nears launch.

China’s DeepSeek AI lab built its reputation on refusing outside money. According to an April 18 report from The Information, the Chinese AI lab is now in talks to raise $300 million or more at a valuation above $10 billion, in its first external capital round.

The proposed round would mark DeepSeek’s first external capital raise since its 2023 founding and a sharp reversal of founder and CEO Liang Wenfeng’s long-stated posture as a champion of research independence. It arrives as DeepSeek confronts a talent drain, a delayed V4 flagship, and U.S. rivals raising at valuations nearly a hundred times larger.

A First Outside Round

DeepSeek is seeking outside funding of $300 million or more at a ten-figure post-money mark, citing The Information’s original report. Until now, High-Flyer Capital Management, the Hangzhou quantitative hedge fund that spawned the AI lab in 2023, funded the operation entirely on its own.

However, earlier approaches from several of China’s largest venture capital firms and technology companies were turned aside, a stance This is consistent with Liang’s view that DeepSeek should prize research independence over outside ownership. The lab previously rejected offers from major Chinese funds and tech conglomerates.

Why the shift matters: Liang has repeatedly argued that hedge-fund parentage gave DeepSeek room to pursue open research without quarterly investor pressure. Recent reporting consistently described the lab as having no immediate fundraising plans. However, current talks, still said to be unclosed, indicate the economics of frontier AI have grown too expensive to sustain on High-Flyer’s balance sheet alone.