Canadian AI startup Cohere is taking over Germany-based Aleph Alpha, with the blessing of their governments, in a bid to offer a sovereign alternative to enterprises in an AI landscape dominated by American players. โSovereign AIโ refers to systems where companies and governments retain full control over their own data โ rather than routing it through U.S. tech giants like Microsoft or Google.
As companies that develop large language models, Aleph Alpha and Cohere have been hometown stars, while still lagging far behind OpenAI and the likes globally. But similarities aside, this isnโt an alliance between equals. Last valued at $6.8 billion, Cohere will lead the new entity that will incorporate Aleph Alpha, subject to approval by authorities and shareholders.
The dealโs key financial backer is Schwarz Group, a German retail conglomerate. As an existing shareholder in Aleph Alpha, it is already fully onboard with the acquisition. And going forward, it will also become a strategic backer of the newly combined entity with โฌ500 million in structured financing (approximately $600 million). In return, Schwarz Group expects the new entity to run on STACKIT โ the sovereign cloud platform operated by its IT division, Schwarz Digits โ giving the retail giant a major enterprise customer for its cloud business.
To fund the combined entity, Cohere is also raising a new round of financing โ a Series E โ and Schwarz Group will serve as its lead investor. The valuation has already been set: according to German business media outlet Handelsblatt, the term sheet pegs the companyโs combined worth at around $20 billion.
This would be a significant leap that combined revenue alone canโt justify. While Cohere reported $240 million in annual recurring revenue in 2025, Aleph Alpha had previously generated little revenue and significant losses. But investors are betting that teaming up will improve their odds against much larger rivals.
They may not be alone in the thinking that consolidation is the path forward. Elon Muskโs AI startup xAI has reportedly discussed a three-way partnership with Franceโs Mistral AI and Cursor, which SpaceX recently secured the option to buy. But it remains unclear whether Mistral would be interested in risking undermining its positioning as an alternative to U.S. tech that boosted its revenues. A partnership with xAI โ an American company โ would complicate that identity.
Cohere, too, is hoping to get tailwinds from enterprises looking for alternatives to AI providers that may not meet their requirements when it comes to privacy and independence. The new entity plans to target highly-regulated industries โ including defense, energy, finance, healthcare, manufacturing and telecommunicationsโ as well as the public sector.