Nvidia among investors in $700 million capital raise by AI firm Nebius Group

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By Alexander Marrow

LONDON (Reuters) – AI infrastructure firm Nebius Group (NBIS) on Monday said it was raising $700 million in a private placement from investors including Nvidia (NVDA), Accel and some accounts managed by Orbis Investments.

Nebius, which emerged in July following a $5.4 billion deal to split the domestic and international assets of Russian internet giant Yandex, is joining a drive to build the infrastructure underpinning artificial intelligence.

Nebius was founded by Arkady Volozh, former founder and CEO of Yandex. Trading in Nasdaq-listed Yandex was suspended soon after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, with Nebius eventually reviving the listing as part of the asset split.

Volozh said the $700 million financing would give Nebius additional firepower to build clusters of graphics processing units (GPUs), cloud platforms and other tools for AI developers faster and on a larger scale.

Nebius has so far committed to investing $1 billion by mid-2025, but Volozh said the company could end up investing more.

Nebius is leasing data centre space in Kansas City, Missouri, and may expand further in the United States, where more than half of the company’s clients are based, Volozh told reporters.

In a statement, Nebius said it would issue 33,333,334 Class A shares at a $21 per share in the private placement, representing an approximately 3% premium to the volume-weighted average price of those shares since Nasdaq trading resumed.

Nebius said the financing was oversubscribed and raised its annualised run-rate revenue by year-end 2025 to between $750 million and $1 billion, from $500 million at the lower end previously.

Nebius also said that it would no longer pursue a share buyback that was approved as the Russia split deal closed and before Nasdaq trading resumed.

“Based on the strong level of investor engagement and technical dynamics which we have observed following the resumption of trading on Nasdaq, we believe that those shareholders who may have wanted to exit have had an opportunity to do so at a price higher than the maximum repurchase price authorised by shareholders,” Nebius Board Chairman John Boynton said.

(Reporting by Alexander Marrow, Editing by Louise Heavens)

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