Databricks announces $10 billion financing at $62 billion valuation

Databricks announces  billion financing at  billion valuation


Close-up of Databricks company logo on building facade, Rincon Hill, San Francisco, June 7, 2024.

Smith Collection/ gado | Archive Photos | Getty Images

Databricks, one of the most valuable privately held companies, announced a $10 billion financing on Tuesday that values the software maker at $62 billion. 

With the money, Databricks will be able to provide liquidity to current and former employees, make acquisitions, and expand overseas, according to a statement. The company’s new valuation is up from $43 billion in 2023. Rival Snowflake was worth about $57 billion at Monday’s close.

Databricks sells software for analyzing and cleaning up data, and it also runs artificial intelligence models for clients. The software is available on the Amazon, Google and Microsoft clouds, which are also competitors. 

The company expects to generate positive free cash flow for the first time with a $3 billion revenue run rate in the quarter that ends on Jan. 31, Databricks said. The company’s revenue in the October quarter grew more than 60% year over year.

Investors in the financing, of which it has raised $8.6 billion to date, include Thrive Capital, Andreessen Horowitz, DST Global, GIC, Iconiq Growth, Insight Partners, MGX, Sands Capital, WCM Investment Management and Wellington Management.

Technology investors have been anticipating a Databricks initial public offering for years. They may only have to wait a few more months.

ServiceTitan, a company with software for plumbers and others working in the trades, raised about $625 million in an initial public offering last week, and some investors have predicted that tech IPOs will become more frequent again in 2025 after a relative drought since late 2021.

Databricks did not offer new information about its expectations for an IPO on Tuesday.

“If we were going to go, the earliest would be, let’s say mid next year or something like that,” Ali Ghodsi, Databricks’ co-founder and CEO, said at the Cerebral Valley AI Summit in November.

Late-stage investors with large funds don’t have many options for what to back, Ghodsi said. 

“There’s nowhere to put it, really, except maybe Databricks, Stripe or, you know, maybe OpenAI,” Ghodsi said.

Databricks made its fourth appearance on CNBC’s Disruptor 50 list of private companies in 2024.

Don’t miss these insights from CNBC PRO

What's next for tech and M&A under Trump 2.0



Source

SiIicon Valley’s AI agent hiccups: Wasted tokens and ‘chaotic’ systems
Technology

SiIicon Valley’s AI agent hiccups: Wasted tokens and ‘chaotic’ systems

San Jose CA, commercial hub of silicon valley and its network of freeways. Steve Proehl | The Image Bank | Getty Images Despite the C-suite’s enthusiasm over artificial intelligence agents that can plow through office tasks like never-sleeping interns, the underlying technology is still rickety and a potential cost-sucker. That much was clear this week […]

Read More
Nvidia’s once-tight bond with gamers is cracking over AI, ‘and that breaks my heart’
Technology

Nvidia’s once-tight bond with gamers is cracking over AI, ‘and that breaks my heart’

For its first 30 years, Nvidia wasn’t a household name unless you were a gamer. Now, some of its original fan base feel left behind as artificial intelligence has made the chipmaker the world’s most valuable company.  “The gaming segment is no longer the driving force of the company. There was one point when it […]

Read More
OpenAI loses multiple executives in latest leadership shakeup
Technology

OpenAI loses multiple executives in latest leadership shakeup

Kevin Weil, chief product officer of OpenAI, speaks during the Hill & Valley forum at the US Capitol in Washington, DC, US, on Wednesday, April 30, 2025. Al Drago | Bloomberg | Getty Images Three OpenAI executives announced their departures from the company on Friday, the latest in a series of leadership shakeups at the […]

Read More