Elon Musk, the CEO of Tesla and X, is looking to raise to $6 billion for his xAI project as he looks to investors worldwide, including those in Hong Kong, to fund his challenge to take on Microsoft-backed OpenAI. Musk’s baby, xAI, is just about 10 months old Elon’s digital family also includes the social network X, formerly known as Twitter, which is already a stakeholder.
At first, the offer was only expected to raise $3 billion, but as more people sought to participate, the price increased. Several people acquainted with the subject claim that in recent weeks, the billionaire’s artificial intelligence start-up has courted wealthy individuals and investors worldwide. Investors include Musk’s best friends from Future Ventures and Sequoia Capital, as well as a few other friends who might also be joining the artificial intelligence (AI) party. But what sparks interest is how smug Musk seems to be about all of this. It doesn’t matter, none of his startups was able to raise even $6 million, let alone three times that amount.
According to three people with knowledge of the discussions, Musk wanted to raise $6 billion in new equity funding for xAI at a $20 billion projected valuation. The sources did, however, admonish that talks were still in progress and that the Tesla CEO was still trying to evaluate investor interest in such substantial sums.
Some stated he had solicited investors in South Korea and Japan, while others alleged he had also targeted sovereign wealth funds in the Middle East. Despite regulatory documents demonstrating that xAI is raising funds, he has refuted multiple recent claims concerning financing. “xAI is not raising capital and I have had no conversations with anyone in this regard,” Musk said on X following the article. As global tensions rise, raising capital in Hong Kong for a US artificial intelligence company may become a politically sensitive task.
To impede China’s advancement of cutting-edge technologies, Washington has attempted to impose export restrictions. The Biden administration outlawed US investment in Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) last year, including in Hong Kong. Musk’s xAI debuted its first product, Grok, a chatbot that learns from social media posts on X to provide more current responses than its rivals. Grok was introduced in December.
The fundraising is being coordinated by Morgan Stanley, which aided in funding Musk’s leveraged acquisition of X, formerly Twitter, in 2022, according to one of the sources. The size of the fundraising effort is indicative of the immense expenses involved in creating generative AI models, which generate text, graphics, and code that resemble humans in a matter of seconds. This process necessitates the use of cutting-edge chips, massive amounts of data, and processing power.
Rival to OpenAI, situated in San Francisco, has raised almost $13 billion from Microsoft alone. Billionaires have also been raised by other start-ups like Anthropic and Cohere from the likes of Google, Amazon, and the leading venture capital firms in Silicon Valley.
The US Securities and Exchange Commission received paperwork from Nevada-based xAI in December that revealed it was looking to raise $1 billion from equity investors. As per the filing, it has collected $135 million towards its target. According to a January Bloomberg story, it had raised $500 million. Musk called the report “fake news” on X.
Having invested in OpenAI from the beginning, Musk left the company in 2018 due to differences with Sam Altman, the CEO. In July of last year, he started his own artificial intelligence business, alleging that competitors like OpenAI, Microsoft, and Google were restricting their AI offerings and paying insufficient attention to safety measures.
In a transaction that values the San Francisco-based company at $86 billion, OpenAI is currently conducting a secondary sale of some of the shares held by its employees. Other than a statement on X in November stating that current X shareholders would “own 25 per cent” of the company without providing any context, Musk has not disclosed any information regarding the financing of xAI.
X’s supporters, which included Oracle CEO Larry Ellison, Sequoia Capital, Andreessen Horowitz, Fidelity Management, and Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, contributed to Musk’s $44 billion buyout of the company that was then known as Twitter. With the recent 70% reduction in Fidelity’s investment in X, the company is now valued at approximately $12.5 billion.
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