Databricks acquires data optimization startup Tabular in fresh challenge to Snowflake

Databricks acquires data optimization startup Tabular in fresh challenge to Snowflake


Ali Ghodsi, co-founder and CEO of Databricks, speaks at the company’s Spark and AI Summit in San Francisco in April 2019.

Databricks

Data analytics software maker Databricks said in a statement on Tuesday that it’s acquiring Tabular, a startup that helps optimize data stored in the cloud.

The gesture could help Databricks more quickly bring out products as it faces competition from Snowflake and other entities.

Databricks is paying over $1 billion to buy Tabular, Databricks CEO Ali Ghodsi said in an interview. The Wall Street Journal reported the size of the deal earlier on Tuesday. Snowflake was also bidding on Tabular, as was Confluent, a person familiar with the matter told CNBC.

Billions in venture capital have helped Databricks finance this and other recent deals, including the acquisitions of database replication startup Arcion and artificial intelligence efficiency startup MosaicML for $100 million and $1.3 billion, respectively. In September, Databricks said it had raised new funding at a $43 billion valuation, making it worth more than most startups and some publicly held enterprise software sellers.

The costs of running queries before exploring and making charts with data can add up. Developers built an open-source format called Apache Iceberg that stores data in tables a variety of tools can then work with. Tabular co-founders Ryan Blue and Dan Weeks came up with Iceberg while at Netflix. Tabular adds business-friendly features to Iceberg and keeps the tables in the Amazon or Google clouds. From there, organizations can connect tables to Snowflake and other systems, enabling less expensive queries.

Last week software stocks tumbled as executives from Salesforce, MongoDB and Okta issued fresh warnings to investors about economic turbulence. Databricks is behaving differently. It’s growing faster and using its capital to take share. Databricks told media outlets in March that it generated $1.6 billion in revenue in the year that ended on Jan. 31, up more than 50%.

Snowflake executives have said some large clients want to move data out of the company’s native storage layer and into Iceberg tables that live in a separate place, such as object storage in the Amazon Web Services cloud. That might result in lower storage revenue for Snowflake. But as organizations become comfortable with running queries on Iceberg tables, that could spur revenue growth from computing workloads running on a large quantity of data stored elsewhere.

“Net-net, we think it’s going to be a positive,” Mike Scarpelli, Snowflake’s finance chief, said at a Morgan Stanley event in March. At its Summit conference in San Francisco on Monday, Snowflake announced that within 90 days it would release open-source catalog software for finding Iceberg tables. Tabular was among the exhibiting partners at the conference.

Databricks has promoted its own open-source initiative called Delta Lake. Focusing more on Iceberg tables might allow Databricks to take business from Snowflake clients that embrace the format. For now, the goal is to provide “full interoperability” between the Delta Lake and Iceberg projects, Ghodsi said.

Tabular was established in 2021 and has raised over $30 million in funding, including from Altimeter Capital, Andreessen Horowitz and Zetta Venture Partners. Tabular has hundreds of customers, and it will work with Databricks to figure out what to do with the product, Ghodsi said.

WATCH: Part of Snowflake’s downfall is related to CEO Frank Slootman’s retirement: Jefferies’ Brent Thill

Part of Snowflake's downfall is related to CEO Frank Slootman's retirement: Jefferies' Brent Thill



Source

Amazon lays off about 100 employees in devices and services unit
Technology

Amazon lays off about 100 employees in devices and services unit

An Amazon device is displayed at an Amazon Devices launch event in New York City, U.S., Feb. 26, 2025. Brendan McDermid | Reuters Amazon is laying off roughly 100 employees in its devices and services division, the company confirmed on Wednesday. The devices and services unit includes a wide range of businesses, such as the […]

Read More
YouTube announces Gemini AI feature to target ads when viewers are most engaged
Technology

YouTube announces Gemini AI feature to target ads when viewers are most engaged

People walk by a YouTube logo as Google celebrates the 20th anniversary of the first video uploaded to YouTube, at the company’s corporate headquarters in San Bruno, California, on April 23, 2025. Josh Edelson | AFP | Getty Images YouTube on Wednesday announced a new tool that will allow advertisers to use Google’s Gemini AI […]

Read More
Cisco says CFO Scott Herren is leaving, company reports earnings beat
Technology

Cisco says CFO Scott Herren is leaving, company reports earnings beat

Cisco Chairman and CEO Chuck Robbins speaks at a keynote address at the Cisco Live! conference in Las Vegas on June 7, 2023. Ethan Miller | Getty Images Entertainment | Getty Images Cisco reported earnings and revenue that topped analysts’ estimates on Wednesday and issued guidance that also exceeded Wall Street’s prediction. Here’s how the […]

Read More