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Markets

DeepSeek Lands $7.4B But State Fund Claims Sole Voting Rights

DeepSeek raised $7.4 billion in its first external funding round, granting equity and voting rights only to a Chinese state fund while every other investor got neither. Key Points: DeepSeek r

AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
June 17, 2026
3 min read
NEWS
DeepSeek Lands $7.4B But State Fund Claims Sole Voting Rights
CryptoCompass editorial visual for markets coverage.

DeepSeek raised $7.4 billion in its first external funding round, granting equity and voting rights only to a Chinese state fund while every other investor got neither.

Key Points:

  • DeepSeek raised more than 50 billion yuan, about $7.4 billion, at a valuation above $50 billion.
  • Founder Liang Wenfeng put in roughly $3 billion, the round's largest single stake.
  • Only China's national AI fund received voting rights, while others accepted a five-year lock-up.

DeepSeek Closes Maiden Round

The round closed Tuesday and lifted the Hangzhou-based lab to a valuation above $50 billion, a level that ranks it as China's most valuable artificial intelligence startup, people familiar with the deal told reporters. The company had operated for nearly three years without a single outside backer. That reticence ended this week in a single, tightly structured deal.

Founder Liang Wenfeng supplied the largest share himself, committing roughly 20 billion yuan, or about $3 billion, which made him the round's single biggest contributor and cemented his control. Tencent added around 10 billion yuan, and battery maker CATL, the world's largest EV battery producer, put in about 5 billion yuan, sources confirmed.

Fewer than ten investors took part. None could put money into DeepSeek directly, because their cash flowed into a limited partnership that Liang manages rather than the company itself. That strips them of voting rights and locks the funds away for a full five years.

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State Fund Holds Sway

Only China's National Artificial Intelligence Industry Investment Fund escaped those terms. The state vehicle, which Beijing uses to steer capital into strategic technology sectors, invested directly and kept both voting rights and freedom from the lock-up, a carve-out analysts described as a clear marker of priorities.

Its stake reportedly ran to about 1 billion yuan. The structure formalizes what insiders had long assumed about the company's direction. For the developers and agencies that run DeepSeek's open-weight models in production, governance now tilts toward the Chinese state rather than the company's commercial partners.

China AI Ambitions

By global standards the valuation stays modest, since the post-money figure sat between $52 billion and $59 billion. OpenAI recently closed a round near an $852 billion mark and Anthropic ranks even higher, while DeepSeek can raise capital only inside China and faces tight limits on American chips.

The company financed itself for years through Liang's quant hedge fund High-Flyer before opening its doors to outsiders. Its open-weight V3 and R1 reasoning models stunned Silicon Valley early last year, matching leading systems at a fraction of the usual training cost and unsettling the belief that huge compute budgets were essential.

The raise now cements a firm founded in 2023 as a national champion, even as it trails Western leaders on scale, capital, and hardware access.

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