Tech14:12 · 14m ago

Israeli Chip Startup Element Labs Raises Over $400 Million at $4 Billion Valuation

Globes
Translated & summarized from Globes by baba
The story · English

Element Labs, a young Israeli semiconductor company founded in 2024 by serial entrepreneur Avigdor Wilentz along with Ran Halutz and David Dahan, has secured a massive funding round of approximately $300-400 million. This latest investment values the company at over $4 billion, marking a significant leap from its previous $1.1 billion valuation last year. The funding came from existing investors including the insurance giant Fidelity.

Operating in near-total secrecy from its bases in Caesarea and Tel Aviv, Element Labs focuses on developing AI processing and communication chips designed to efficiently run pre-trained AI models. Unlike other chipmakers targeting high-cost, specialized AI computations, Element Labs aims to reduce the operational costs of AI inference for large cloud providers and AI companies such as Amazon, Microsoft, Meta, Anthropic, and OpenAI. Their technology addresses the growing need for affordable, efficient AI inference processors as current GPUs, like those from Nvidia, are expensive and less optimized for inference workloads.

The company employs around 350 staff and additional contractors, recruiting primarily through referrals rather than public job postings, reflecting its discreet approach likely due to competitive pressures and partnerships with major American cloud firms. Element Labs is part of a broader portfolio of Wilentz’s ventures, including Xsight Labs, which recently raised $300 million at a $3 billion valuation. Wilentz, known for selling previous chip companies like Annapurna Labs to Amazon and Galileo to Marvell for billions, has returned to a more active role in Israeli tech despite previously reducing his local involvement.

Element Labs’ innovative chip architecture and AI communication infrastructure aim to challenge established players like Broadcom and Marvell in the AI chip market. The company has not publicly commented on the funding news. This round underscores the growing investor confidence in Israeli AI hardware startups addressing critical cloud computing challenges.

Read the original at Globes
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