Key Highlights
- SiFive secured $400 million in fresh capital, reaching a $3.65 billion valuation
- Nvidia participated in the funding alongside Apollo, Point72, T. Rowe Price, and other investors
- Atreides Management spearheaded the investment round
- The startup provides open-source RISC-V chip blueprint licenses rather than physical chips
- Funds will be directed toward developing CPU architectures for AI data center applications
A San Jose-based chip design company launched in 2015, SiFive has successfully completed a $400 million financing round, pushing its valuation to $3.65 billion. Investor appetite proved stronger than anticipated, with the round becoming oversubscribed.
Nvidia has invested in SiFive
SiFive announced it has raised $400 Million in a Series G round valuing the company at $3.65 Billion https://t.co/qpp7aUfTaf
— Ark Invest Tracker (@ArkkDaily) April 11, 2026
The financing was spearheaded by Atreides Management, established by former Fidelity portfolio manager Gavin Baker. Graphics chip giant Nvidia joined as an investor, alongside Apollo Global Management, Point72, Sutter Hill Ventures, Prosperity 7 Ventures, and advisory accounts managed by T. Rowe Price Investment Management.
According to Reuters, SiFive’s chief executive Patrick Little anticipates this will be the company’s last private funding round prior to going public, although no specific IPO timeline has been disclosed.
Rather than producing physical semiconductors, SiFive operates as a licensing business, providing customizable chip architectural blueprints to clients who integrate them into proprietary designs. Tech conglomerate Alphabet, Google’s parent organization, counts among its current clientele.
SiFive’s Competitive Advantage
The company’s architectural blueprints utilize RISC-V, an open-standard chip instruction set governed by an independent nonprofit organization. Unlike proprietary architectures from Arm or Intel’s x86 platform, RISC-V isn’t controlled by any individual corporation. This independence offers companies greater autonomy in managing their semiconductor supply chains.
In March 2022, SiFive had completed a $175 million funding round headed by Coatue Management, achieving a pre-money valuation of $2.33 billion. That financing included participation from Intel Capital and Qualcomm Ventures.
Arm Holdings has traditionally commanded the chip design licensing landscape. However, Arm recently made a strategic pivot by introducing its first internally manufactured processor last month—an AI-focused chip co-developed with Meta, attracting customers like OpenAI and Cloudflare. This transformation positioned Arm as a direct rival to companies it traditionally served.
Little suggests this strategic shift creates opportunities. “There’s uncertainty about where their tried-and-true suppliers are going to be able to take them over the coming years,” the CEO explained.
AI Data Center Focus
The $400 million capital injection will finance SiFive’s development of a CPU architecture engineered specifically for AI-focused data center environments. This represents a strategic pivot for the organization, which has traditionally concentrated on chip designs for embedded applications and niche markets.
Historically, RISC-V processors have been perceived as less developed compared to Arm or x86 alternatives for intensive computational workloads. However, Little maintains the technology has matured sufficiently to compete effectively in data center deployments.
SiFive’s architectural designs are being engineered for compatibility with Nvidia’s CUDA software ecosystem and its NVLink Fusion infrastructure. NVLink Fusion represents a rack-level server architecture enabling various CPU types to interface directly with Nvidia’s AI computing platform.
Interestingly, Nvidia is concurrently challenging Intel and AMD in data center CPU markets while simultaneously supporting SiFive, a company leveraging an entirely distinct chip architecture.
The data center CPU sector is experiencing heightened competitive dynamics. Arm launched a new product offering last month, Nvidia has deployed its own solution, and Intel has acknowledged demand levels exceeding its current production capacity.
This marks SiFive’s first capital raise since March 2022, representing a four-year gap between funding rounds.
