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Kandou AI raises $225 million from SoftBank and Synopsys amid the AI chip race

Kandou AI has closed a $225 million round with participation from SoftBank, Synopsys, and Maverick Silicon. The AI chip startup is led by a former Goldman…

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Kandou AI raises $225 million from SoftBank and Synopsys amid the AI chip race
Source: Bloomberg Tech. Collage: Hamidun News.
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Kandou AI attracted $225 million and joined the list of companies now closely watched in the race for AI infrastructure. For the market, what matters is not only the size of the round but also the set of participants: SoftBank, Synopsys, and Maverick Silicon entered the deal.

Who joined the Kandou AI round

Kandou AI is a company working on AI chips, and its CEO was previously a managing director at Goldman Sachs. This alone makes the story notable: in the semiconductor business, teams with such a combination of financial and technology profile rarely find themselves in the spotlight. Now the startup has announced raising $225 million, and the very fact of such a round shows that investors remain willing to make large bets on fundamental infrastructure for artificial intelligence.

The composition of investors also looks indicative. SoftBank has long been associated with major technology bets and does not enter deals by chance, especially when it comes to a segment with a long development cycle and high capital intensity. Synopsys is a company from the very core of the semiconductor ecosystem, and its participation reads as a strong industry signal.

Maverick Silicon adds specialized weight to the round from the chip market side. Together, this looks not like speculative interest but as a bet on a real technology platform.

Why it matters

Over the past two years, money in AI has most often been associated with models, clouds, and data centers. But without its own hardware, specialized accelerators, and new architectures, this growth quickly runs into constraints in terms of price, energy consumption, and access to computing. That's why news about rounds in the chip segment now reads broader than ordinary venture financing: it's an indicator of where the market is ready to direct the next layer of capital. In the case of Kandou AI, several signals are important:

  • a large check for a company working in the complex and expensive AI chip segment;
  • the participation of both financial and strategic investors simultaneously;
  • confirmation of interest in alternative computing platforms, not just software and models;
  • growing confidence in teams that promise to build an infrastructure layer for the next wave of AI.

Even from a brief description of the deal, it's clear that the market continues to look for new entry points into the hardware side of AI. This is important for the entire chain—from model developers to corporate clients who are already counting not just generation quality but also the cost of launching, scaling, and supporting AI services. The more strong players the industry has in hardware, the higher the chance of reducing dependence on a narrow circle of suppliers and the emergence of more flexible configurations.

Signal for the market

The round itself does not answer all questions about Kandou AI's product, timelines for launching solutions to market, or the company's future share in the industry. But the published information is enough to see the main point: investor interest in AI chips is not cooling down but rather becoming more selective and strategic. Money goes not simply to teams with the fashionable word "AI" in their description, but to companies that claim a place in the fundamental technology stack.

For SoftBank, such a deal fits into an understandable logic of searching for major platform narratives. For Synopsys, it is also a marker that industry participants are carefully watching new architectures and new players. And for the market itself, it is yet another reminder: the battle for leadership in AI is not happening only at the level of chatbots and models, but much deeper—at the level of microchips, design tools, and control over the computational base.

What it means

The Kandou AI round shows that capital in AI is increasingly shifting from showcase applications to infrastructure. If this trend continues, the focus will not only be on model developers but also on companies building new hardware for the next stage of the AI race.

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