SiFive raises $400 million from Atreides, Nvidia for data-center chip technology


FILE PHOTO: Semiconductor chips are seen on a printed circuit board in this illustration picture created on February 17, 2023. REUTERS/Florence Lo/Illustration/File Photo

SAN FRANCISCO, April ⁠9 (Reuters) - Silicon Valley startup SiFive said on Thursday it has raised a $400 million ⁠round of funding from Atreides Management, Nvidia and others to enter the booming ‌market for data-center central processor chips.

The round brings SiFive's valuation to $3.65 billion, and CEO Patrick Little told Reuters he expects it to be the firm's last round of funding before filing for a public offering, though ​he did not say when SiFive plans to do so.

SiFive ⁠does not sell chips but instead ⁠sells blueprints that customers such as Alphabet's Google can customize for their own internal chip ⁠designs. ‌That intellectual property business was for decades dominated by Arm Holdings, but Arm last month unveiled its own chips, making Arm for the first time a ⁠potential competitor to many of its longtime customers.

Little said that ​Arm's new strategic direction ‌opened an opportunity for SiFive to win over new customers. SiFive's designs use a ⁠new open chip ​standard called RISC-V that is overseen by a nonprofit foundation and not controlled by any single company, the way that Arm's chip technology is.

"There's uncertainty about where their tried-and-true suppliers are going ⁠to be able to take them over the coming ​years," Little said of SiFive's customers. "And so all of them have become comfortable, because we've worked with them for a decade, that RISC-V has now matured to the point where it ⁠can be that option for them."

SiFive will use the $400 million in funding to develop a design for a central processor unit for data centers. That market is heating up, with Arm introducing an offering last month, Nvidia entering the market and Intel seeing so much ​demand it could not keep up.

"We've decided that we're going ⁠after the highest brass ring in the data center," Little said.

In addition toAtreides and Nvidia, other ​investors in the round included Apollo, D1 Capital Partners, ‌Point72, and accounts advised by T. Rowe Price ​Investment Management, as well as previous investors Prosperity 7 Ventures, Capital Group and Sutter Hill Ventures.

(Reporting by Stephen Nellis in San Francisco; Editing by Matthew Lewis)

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