- Anthropic is seeking to raise about $10bn in new funding that would value it at roughly $350bn, nearly double its valuation just four months ago.
- The proposed round reflects ferocious investor appetite for generative AI, even amid wider concerns about an AI valuation bubble.
What happened: Valuation surge reshapes AI investment
AI research company Anthropic, maker of the Claude chatbot, is in advanced discussions to secure roughly $10bn in fresh capital at a valuation of around $350bn — a dramatic leap from its last funding round in September 2025, when it was valued at about $183bn.
Sources familiar with the matter told Reuters that Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund GIC and Coatue Management are expected to lead the financing, and that the deal could close within weeks, though terms may still shift. The surge in valuation would place Anthropic among the most valuable private tech companies globally, in line with peaks seen across the AI sector.
Founded in 2021 by former OpenAI employees, Anthropic has carved out a reputation for its Claude models, particularly among developers using them for complex coding tasks. The company’s enterprise sales have reportedly been driving strong growth, with plans to more than double its annualised revenue run rate this year.
Anthropic is also reportedly preparing for a possible initial public offering as early as 2026, engaging law firm Wilson Sonsini to advise on the process. Backers including Alphabet-owned Google, Amazon and Nvidia have already poured billions into the company — part of a broader strategic push by tech giants into the generative AI market.
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Why it’s important
Anthropic’s potential $350bn valuation underscores the extraordinary level of capital chasing generative AI companies. Investors are rushing to stake positions in firms they believe will dominate future software, automation and cloud-based services.
However, soaring valuations have sparked debate about the sustainability of the AI investment boom. While some argue that companies like Anthropic and OpenAI (valued at around $500bn) are justified by rapid adoption and enterprise demand, sceptics warn this could resemble classic technology bubbles.
For Anthropic, the fresh funds would support expensive AI compute infrastructure, research and global market expansion — crucial as it competes with rivals such as OpenAI and emerging players worldwide.
The stakes are high: how these mega-valued startups perform in revenue, profitability and eventual public markets will shape perceptions of generative AI’s long-term economic impact.
