Canada's Cohere and Germany's Aleph Alpha entered advanced merger talks, reported by Handelsblatt on 10 April 2026 1. German Digital Minister Karsten Wildberger called it "a very strong signal" and indicated Berlin's willingness to become an anchor customer of the merged entity.
Berlin attached conditions: development services must remain in Germany and the merged company must maintain infrastructure sovereignty. Schwarz Group, the parent of Lidl and Kaufland and Europe's largest retailer by revenue, consolidated its position as Aleph Alpha's major shareholder in February 2026 by acquiring Bosch Ventures' stake 2. Aleph Alpha's PhariaAI platform is already integrated into Schwarz's STACKIT sovereign cloud offering and deployed in German ministry pilot projects.
Schwarz's involvement goes further than typical tech investment. The company operates 575,000 employees across 30 countries and runs STACKIT as its own sovereign cloud platform. Integrating PhariaAI into the retail and logistics operations of a company that size gives Aleph Alpha a captive enterprise customer base that most AI startups lack. If the merger completes, that distribution channel may prove more consequential than the German government's anchor customer commitment.
Cohere, however, has a US investor base that likely prefers operational flexibility over German sovereignty conditions. If the deal closes, the governance structure becomes a template for how sovereign AI companies can be anchored nationally while operating globally. If it fails, Germany's sovereign AI strategy loses its anchor company.
