The company has initiated early discussions regarding a potential initial public offering on Shanghai’s STAR Market, with an internal goal to submit filing documents before the end of this year. While the startup gained international prominence by launching high-performing, low-cost AI models, the reality of maintaining a competitive edge has forced a departure from its original strategy of self-funding. Founder Liang Wenfeng previously bankrolled the firm through his quantitative hedge fund, High-Flyer, but the current pursuit of proprietary AI inference chips and expanded data center capacity requires significant capital expenditure.
DeepSeek faces intensifying pressure from domestic heavyweights like ByteDance and Alibaba, alongside well-capitalized rivals such as Moonshot and MiniMax. The June fundraising round already saw the entry of major institutional players, including Tencent and CATL, alongside China’s national AI fund. By seeking an additional 50 billion yuan, the firm aims to solidify its position as a domestic champion, aligning with Beijing’s push to reduce reliance on foreign technology. While these plans remain in early stages, the rapid succession of funding efforts underscores the high-stakes battle for computational dominance in the Chinese market.
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