Canadian AI start-up Cohere has agreed to acquire Germany’s Aleph Alpha in a transatlantic deal aimed at providing governments and regulated industries with an alternative to U.S. tech giants. The merger will establish a combined entity anchored in Germany and Canada, pooling engineering talent and computational resources across two key G7 nations. The new organization plans to target customers in sectors such as public services, finance, defense, energy, manufacturing, telecommunications, and healthcare.
As part of the agreement, the German retail giant Schwarz Group, which operates brands like Lidl and Kaufland, is leading a €500 million structured financing commitment for Cohere’s upcoming Series E round. The Schwarz Group’s sovereign cloud service, Stackit, will serve as the technical backbone of the merged entity.
The market opportunity for sovereign AI services is significant. Research firm McKinsey estimates that AI services will exceed $1 trillion annually, with sovereign AI needs accounting for nearly $600 billion of that total. “Organizations globally are demanding uncompromising control over their AI stack,” said Aidan Gomez, co-founder and CEO of Cohere. He emphasized that the partnership would provide enterprises and governments with “the absolute certainty that their data remains their own.”
Ilhan Scheer, co-CEO of Aleph Alpha, echoed these sentiments, stating that the new company would offer European institutions “access to powerful, yet controllable AI they can truly own.” He characterized the venture as a “real counterweight” for organizations hesitant to rely on a single provider or jurisdiction for AI solutions.
Industry analysts view the merger as a strategic move to create a robust transatlantic competitor against dominant U.S. firms. Thomas Husson, vice-president and principal analyst at Forrester, described the deal as establishing “a unique transatlantic player designed to challenge the dominance of U.S. giants.” He noted that while the acquisition is technically by the Canadian firm, the true power dynamics may be shared, with Cohere contributing cutting-edge engineering and global product strategies, while German stakeholders, particularly the Schwarz Group, provide essential capital and political support.
Husson characterized the structure of the deal as “hybrid and unusual,” aimed at capturing the sovereign AI market and offering governments and highly regulated industries a secure alternative to U.S. cloud services. He highlighted the potential competitive pressure on French AI company Mistral, stating that the merger creates a new rival that combines North American agility with European regulatory trust.
However, Husson cautioned that the success of the joint venture is not guaranteed. “Ultimately, the deal’s success depends on whether this dual-headed leadership can remain unified while competing against the massive budgets of giants like Microsoft, Google, or OpenAI,” he said.
The transaction is still subject to approval from Aleph Alpha shareholders and competition regulators. In the previous year, Cohere raised $500 million at a valuation of $6.8 billion and appointed Joelle Pineau, a former vice-president for AI research at Meta, as its first chief AI officer. Pineau, a Canadian computer scientist and a professor at McGill University, led Meta’s Fundamental AI Research team.
Cohere’s oversubscribed funding round was spearheaded by Radical Ventures and Inovia Capital, with additional investment from existing stakeholders, including AMD Ventures, Nvidia, and Salesforce Ventures.
This merger not only highlights the growing demand for sovereign AI solutions but also emphasizes a broader trend towards collaboration between North America and Europe in the tech industry. As regulatory landscapes continue to evolve, the newly formed entity could play a pivotal role in shaping the future of AI governance and deployment in highly regulated sectors.
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