[BEIJING] Moonshot AI is aiming to raise up to US$1 billion in a newly expanded funding round, which could elevate the startup’s valuation to approximately US$18 billion. This development marks a substantial increase from its previous valuation of US$10 billion just three months ago, reflecting a growing investor interest in Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) developers that are striving to compete with established leaders in Silicon Valley.
The company, known for its Kimi chatbot, initiated discussions for this latest financing round after successfully securing over US$700 million earlier this year at its US$10 billion valuation. This rapid ascent from a valuation of US$4.3 billion last year during a US$500 million funding tranche underscores the momentum within China’s AI sector, which is increasingly attracting significant financial backing.
While the identities of the participants in the new funding round remain unclear, it has been reported that existing backers, including tech giants Alibaba Group, Tencent, and 5Y Capital, have increased their investments at the US$10 billion valuation level. A spokesperson for Moonshot did not respond to requests for comment regarding the funding round.
The swift pace of Moonshot’s fundraising efforts highlights a growing appetite among investors for a cohort of Chinese startups that are competing with companies such as OpenAI and Anthropic to deliver top-tier AI services. In Hong Kong, competitors Zhipu and MiniMax Group have recently been valued between US$30 billion and US$40 billion, with MiniMax at one point eclipsing Baidu, a long-established player in the Chinese Internet sector, in terms of market capitalization.
This surge in investment interest has been partly fueled by the success of the open-source agent OpenClaw, which has prompted both major cloud providers and emerging AI startups in China to develop their own versions for easier adoption. Moonshot has been at the forefront of this trend, launching its own version, Kimi Claw, powered by its latest Kimi K2.5 model. Following the launch, the company’s monthly sales reportedly surpassed its total revenue for the previous year, indicating a robust market response.
Founded by former Tsinghua University professor Yang Zhilin, who has prior experience with AI projects at Meta Platforms and Google, Moonshot offers tiered subscription plans for its chatbot technology and licenses its underlying technology to enterprise clients. However, it still trails behind rivals Zhipu and MiniMax in terms of commercialization.
As Chinese AI developers expand their global footprint, they face increasing scrutiny over their practices. Last month, Anthropic accused Moonshot, along with competitors DeepSeek and MiniMax, of allegedly extracting results from its Claude model to enhance their own offerings, a controversial method known as distillation.
The ongoing interest in AI startups in China suggests a pivotal shift in the global technology landscape, where investments are not only creating significant valuations but also positioning these companies as formidable players in the burgeoning AI industry. As the race intensifies to develop innovative AI solutions, the ramifications for both domestic and international markets could be profound.
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