By Stephen Nellis
SAN FRANCISCO, April 9 (Reuters) – Silicon Valley startup SiFive said on Thursday it has raised a $400 million round of funding from Atreides Management, โNvidia and others to enter the booming market for data-center central processor chips.
The โround brings SiFive’s valuation to $3.65 billion, and CEO Patrick Little told Reuters he expects it to be the โfirm’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 โintellectual property business was for โ decades dominated by Arm Holdings, but Arm last month unveiled its own chips, making Arm for the first time a potential competitor to โ 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 โthat is โoverseen by a nonprofit foundation and not controlled โby any single company, the way โthat 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 โthem.”
SiFive will use the $400 million in funding to develop โa design for a central processor unit for โdata centers. That market is heating โup, with Arm introducing an offering last month, Nvidia entering the market โand Intel seeing so much demand โit could not keep โup.
“We’ve decided that we’re going after the highest brass ring in the data center,” Little said.
In addition to Atreides and Nvidia, other investors in the round included Apollo, โD1 Capital Partners, Point72, and โaccounts advised by T. Rowe Price Investment Management, as well as previous โinvestors Prosperity 7 Ventures, Capital Group and Sutter Hill Ventures.
(Reporting by Stephen Nellis โin San Francisco; Editing by Matthew Lewis)