Potential investors reportedly include:
If completed at the upper end of the range, the round would rank among the largest financings ever for a Chinese AI company.
Importantly, the deal is not finalized, and both the valuation and investor lineup could change before any agreement closes.
DeepSeek’s pitch to investors appears different from many AI startups. Instead of emphasizing immediate revenue growth, Liang has reportedly stressed that the company’s main goal is pushing the boundaries of AI research.
In meetings with prospective backers, DeepSeek management has said the company will:
This approach resembles a research‑lab strategy rather than a typical venture‑backed software company built around quick monetization.
Part of the reason DeepSeek can take a research‑first approach is its origin story.
The company was created by Liang Wenfeng, a Chinese entrepreneur who previously co‑founded the quantitative hedge fund High‑Flyer. DeepSeek itself was launched in 2023 as an AI research initiative connected to that ecosystem.
High‑Flyer had already invested heavily in computing infrastructure and AI research, which helped DeepSeek develop early models without relying on outside venture capital.
This background gave the startup unusual flexibility compared with most AI companies that must quickly prove commercial returns.
Investor enthusiasm around DeepSeek largely stems from its rapid technical progress.
The company gained global attention after releasing its R1 reasoning model, which demonstrated competitive performance while reportedly costing far less to train than many Western models.
In April 2026, DeepSeek introduced a preview of its V4 model, continuing its strategy of releasing capable AI systems at relatively low cost.
Reports suggest the company is already preparing V4.1, expected to arrive as an update designed to improve performance and speed up its model‑release cycle.
The new funding would likely help finance:
DeepSeek’s funding talks are happening at a moment when governments and investors increasingly view frontier AI as a strategic industry.
A large round led by Chinese state‑linked funds would signal strong national backing for domestic AI research—and potentially accelerate China’s ability to compete with leading Western labs.
At the same time, DeepSeek’s insistence on open‑source releases stands out in an industry where many frontier models are becoming more closed and proprietary.
DeepSeek is attempting something unusual: raising billions of dollars while explicitly telling investors the company may prioritize long‑term research over short‑term profits.
If the funding round closes near the reported figures, it would cement the startup as one of the most highly valued AI labs in the world—while testing whether investors are willing to back a strategy focused on open models, rapid research progress, and the long pursuit of AGI rather than immediate revenue.
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