Skip to content
You can now search across every topic, entity and event.What's new
UK Startups and Innovation
13APR

Sovereign AI unit backs Alphabet-owned lab

3 min read
17:59UTC

The UK Sovereign AI Unit joined Isomorphic Labs' $2.1bn Series B on 12 May, its third direct equity cheque in fifteen days and its first into a company majority-owned by a US technology giant.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

SAIU invested in an Alphabet-majority subsidiary, setting a sovereign eligibility precedent without any published ownership rule.

The UK Sovereign AI Unit (SAIU) joined Isomorphic Labs' $2.1bn Series B on 12 May 2026, according to a DSIT press release announcing the investment. 1 The round was led by Thrive Capital, with Alphabet, GV (formerly Google Ventures, Alphabet's early-stage arm), CapitalG (Alphabet's growth equity fund), MGX (UAE), and Temasek (Singapore) also participating. Secretary of State Liz Kendall announced the cheque; investment size was withheld as commercially sensitive.

Isomorphic Labs was founded in 2021 by Sir Demis Hassabis, Nobel laureate and co-founder of DeepMind, as a spinout of DeepMind with Alphabet retaining majority control. The DSIT press release described the company as "British-founded and headquartered" and noted its "meaningful UK presence", without addressing the ownership structure or whether Alphabet's strategic control over intellectual property, geography, and exit decisions conflicts with the SAIU's stated purpose of strengthening UK ownership of sovereign AI infrastructure.

Chi Onwurah MP (Shadow Science and Technology spokesperson) had placed the ownership question formally on record on 7 May: she wrote to DSIT minister Kanishka Narayan, describing DSIT's technology sovereignty strategy as incoherent . Five days later, the SAIU invested in a company whose controlling shareholder, Alphabet, was simultaneously co-investing via its own vehicles in the same round: UK sovereign capital sat alongside CapitalG and GV, both Alphabet instruments, in a single syndicate.

The SAIU has now made three direct equity investments: Callosum in April , Ineffable Intelligence at $1.1bn on 27 April , and Isomorphic on 12 May. DSIT has published no ownership threshold, sovereignty test, or eligibility criterion for SAIU equity. The Isomorphic investment therefore establishes by practice what no rule has yet established by design: majority-foreign-owned, UK-headquartered AI companies qualify for SAIU backing, including when the foreign controlling shareholder is a US technology conglomerate participating in the same round.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The UK government has a programme called the Sovereign AI Unit (SAIU) that buys small stakes in British AI companies, with the aim of keeping cutting-edge AI technology under UK influence. On 12 May 2026, it made its third investment: buying a minority share in Isomorphic Labs, an AI company that uses artificial intelligence to design new medicines. The catch is that Isomorphic Labs is actually majority-owned by Alphabet, the American company that owns Google. So UK public money is going into a company where a US tech giant has the final say over strategy and decisions. The government called Isomorphic 'British-founded and headquartered', which is true, but that is different from British-controlled.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Three structural gaps created the SAIU's Isomorphic position. First, DSIT published no ownership threshold or eligibility criterion for SAIU equity before deploying capital, leaving definition-by-practice as the only operating rule.

Second, the UK lacks a deep-tech company at Isomorphic's scale that is both independent and domestically owned: the pipeline of genuinely sovereign AI infrastructure companies tops out well below the $2.1bn round size.

Third, the political pressure to be seen co-investing in high-profile UK AI rounds outweighs the governance pressure to define 'sovereign' precisely, because the downside of missing a marquee $2.1bn deal is visible and immediate, while the downside of definitional incoherence is diffuse and deferred.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    The Isomorphic investment sets a de facto SAIU eligibility rule: UK-headquartered companies with majority-foreign-controlling shareholders qualify for sovereign backing. Every subsequent SAIU deal will be judged against this precedent unless DSIT publishes an ownership threshold.

    Immediate · 0.9
  • Risk

    Chi Onwurah MP has the Isomorphic investment on parliamentary record as of 12 May. A Public Accounts Committee inquiry into SAIU deployment criteria is a plausible medium-term consequence if further Alphabet-adjacent investments follow.

    Medium term · 0.6
  • Consequence

    UK AI founders without Alphabet or major US corporate backing may face a higher bar for SAIU equity than the Isomorphic precedent suggests: the SAIU's three equity investments have all involved co-syndication with US institutional capital, not independent UK founders.

    Short term · 0.7
First Reported In

Update #4 · State capital lands on UK tech in nine days

GOV.UK / DSIT· 13 May 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Institute of Physics
Institute of Physics
The Institute has long argued STFC's national-laboratory infrastructure, not its grant programmes, is the binding constraint on UK physics output, and warns mothballing capacity like Clara removes capability that cannot be rebuilt on a four-year cycle. It represents the discovery-science community absorbing the reallocation the Bank's equity cheques do not touch.
Helsing
Helsing
The Munich-headquartered defence-AI firm chose Plymouth over Continental sites for a £350m manufacturing plant building underwater surveillance gliders, alongside its record raise. Its choice of postcode signals confidence in UK manufacturing capacity for defence hardware even as it looks abroad for the capital financing that hardware.
Dragoneer Investment Group, Lightspeed Venture Partners and Iconiq
Dragoneer Investment Group, Lightspeed Venture Partners and Iconiq
The three US growth-capital firms backed Helsing's $1.8bn round at an $18bn valuation, more than doubling the mark set only a year earlier, with demand reportedly exceeding the capital on offer. Their money, not a UK sovereign vehicle, is what funds the Plymouth plant, extending a pattern of foreign capital underwriting British defence-hardware manufacturing this cycle.
British Business Bank
British Business Bank
The Bank wrote its largest-ever direct life-sciences cheque into Alchemab and added a £6.5bn SME lending guarantee the same week UKRI confirmed the STFC cuts. It is deploying an April mandate change letting it lead venture rounds and invest directly up to £60m per company, treating equity extension rounds and small-business debt as newly within its risk appetite.
Daphni
Daphni
The Paris seed fund joined Speedinvest and three UK backers in Astral Systems' GBP23m Series A for modular fusion reactors, one of the round's five European co-investors betting on lab-to-market fusion ahead of any working commercial reactor. Unlike CuspAI's all-foreign cap table, this round kept a UK lead investor in Mercia Ventures.
EQT
EQT
EQT, appointed by the European Innovation Council to run the EUR5bn Scaleup Europe Fund, entered advanced talks for a further CuspAI stake reported on 3 July, the fund's first pursuit of a UK-founded winner. A closed deal would put EU sovereign capital, not a UK vehicle, on the cap table of a company Britain's own funds passed over.