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ExclusiveDeepSeek to soon close first external fundraising in US$50b valuation: sources

Backers include AI-focused affiliates under the third phase of the China Integrated Circuit Industry Investment Fund, sources say

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A man takes a photo of a DeepSeek display at a shopping mall in Hangzhou, in China’s eastern Zhejiang province, on April 23. Photo: AFP
Ben Jiangin Beijing

Chinese artificial intelligence high-flier DeepSeek is expected to close its first external financing round soon, boosting its valuation to up to US$50 billion, according to three people familiar with the matter, as the country’s marquee state-backed investment vehicle joins in bankrolling what is seen as a national technology champion.

The round was being backed by a group of state-linked investors, including AI-focused affiliates under the third phase of the China Integrated Circuit Industry Investment Fund, known as the “Big Fund III”, the people said, requesting anonymity because the information is private.

Global investment firm Hillhouse was also involved in the funding discussions, the people said. Shenzhen-based video gaming and social media giant Tencent Holdings took part in the round too, they added. The final valuation could still change as talks were ongoing, they said.

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DeepSeek, the Big Fund III, and Tencent did not immediately respond to a request for comment. A Hillhouse spokesman said the firm was not making an investment in DeepSeek.

The latest valuation – five times the initial US$10 billion value local media outlets reported last month when the Hangzhou-based frontier AI lab started the funding round – reflects the interest of some of China’s largest state-backed investors and underscores the company’s growing importance in the intensifying race between the US and China for AI leadership.

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Sources told the South China Morning Post earlier that DeepSeek was prioritising state-backed and industrial investors, including local government guidance funds and affiliated platforms, in its first financing round, favouring those that could provide strategic resources such as AI infrastructure over those that could only offer capital.

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