This week, Cerebras Systems, a leader in AI chip manufacturing, revealed it has successfully raised $1 billion in new funding, elevating its valuation to $23 billion. This figure marks a significant rise from the $8.1 billion valuation recorded just six months prior.
While the funding round was spearheaded by Tiger Global, a substantial portion was contributed by Benchmark Capital, one of the firm's earliest investors, who injected at least $225 million into this latest round.
Benchmark first invested in Cerebras during the startup's $27 million Series A round back in 2016. To accommodate its investment strategy, Benchmark established two separate funds, referred to as 'Benchmark Infrastructure,' specifically for supporting its investment in Cerebras.
Cerebras stands out in the industry due to the remarkable size of its processors. The flagship chip, known as the Wafer Scale Engine, unveiled in 2024, measures about 8.5 inches on each side and integrates a staggering 4 trillion transistors into a single silicon piece. This design utilizes nearly an entire 300-millimeter silicon wafer, unlike traditional chips that are small fragments cut from these wafers.
This innovative architecture allows for 900,000 specialized cores to operate in parallel, enabling the system to execute AI calculations without the delays typically associated with data transfer between multiple chips. As a result, Cerebras claims that its systems can perform AI inference tasks over 20 times faster than competing technologies.
The funding arrives as Cerebras gains traction in the competitive AI infrastructure landscape. Recently, the company secured a multi-year agreement worth over $10 billion to supply 750 megawatts of computing power to OpenAI, a partnership aimed at enhancing response times for complex AI queries through 2028.
Cerebras asserts that its proprietary chips designed for AI applications outperform those from Nvidia. The company is also gearing up for a public offering, with plans to debut in the second quarter of 2026.