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UK Startups and Innovation
14JUL

CuspAI raising $400m on Bezos money

4 min read
08:43UTC

CuspAI, a 2024 Cambridge AI-materials company, has signed term sheets for a reported $400m round at a $2.6bn valuation with Bezos Expeditions among the backers. The round is not yet closed.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

The fortnight's biggest UK round is foreign-led and not yet closed.

CuspAI, a Cambridge AI-materials company founded in 2024, is raising a reported $400m at a $2.6bn valuation, with Bezos Expeditions and Kleiner Perkins among the backers, according to the Financial Times 1. Term sheets are signed; the round is still being raised and has not closed 2. If it completes, the valuation lands at more than four times the company's September 2025 mark. Geoffrey Hinton and Yann LeCun, two of the people who built modern deep learning, sit on its advisory board.

The company solves a narrow problem. A customer specifies the properties it needs, a heat-resistant coating, a catalyst, a filter, and the platform generates candidate molecular structures and simulates them in silico before anyone touches a lab bench, compressing a discovery cycle that historically ran for years of wet-lab iteration. Meta is a customer for carbon-capture materials, Hyundai is another, and CuspAI worked with the Finnish chemicals group Kemira on materials to strip PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, the so-called forever chemicals) from water 3.

PhysicsX took its $300m Series C from Singapore's Temasek , and Orbital Industries closed an earlier Series B with no UK lead investor at all , the same shape the CuspAI round now repeats. British seed money is being rebuilt at the bottom of the market while the largest rounds are underwritten from Seattle and Singapore, which in practice means the founders stay in Cambridge while the upside accrues to investors abroad. AI-materials is the newest vertical to mint a near-unicorn this way, and it did so without a domestic lead.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

When a scientist or engineer needs a new material with specific properties ; say, a coating that resists extreme heat, or a filter that removes toxic chemicals from water ; the traditional approach is to mix and test compounds in a laboratory over months or years. CuspAI, a Cambridge startup founded in 2024, uses AI to do that work computationally: the computer generates and tests thousands of candidate molecules before anyone touches a lab bench. On or around 20 June 2026, the Financial Times reported that CuspAI is raising $400m from investors including Jeff Bezos's personal investment fund and the Silicon Valley firm Kleiner Perkins, at a reported valuation of $2.6bn. Term sheets have been signed, but the deal has not yet formally closed, so these figures are not confirmed. If the round does close at that valuation, it would make CuspAI worth more than four times what investors valued it at in September 2025. PFAS ; per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, sometimes called 'forever chemicals' ; are a class of industrial compounds that persist in the environment and have been linked to health problems. CuspAI is working with the Finnish chemicals company Kemira to find materials that can remove PFAS from water, which is one reason industrial customers are interested even at this early stage.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

AI-materials discovery requires a specific combination of frontier compute (for running molecular simulations at scale), large curated materials datasets, and the ability to hire researchers at the intersection of computational chemistry and machine learning.

UK universities produce the researchers; the compute and dataset infrastructure is concentrated in the US. Kleiner Perkins and Bezos Expeditions have direct relationships with the hyperscaler infrastructure that makes the product work, making them strategically useful LPs beyond the capital itself.

The valuation step-up mechanism ; more than four times the September 2025 mark ; reflects a commercial pull from industrial customers that was not visible at the earlier round. Meta's carbon-capture materials work, Hyundai's materials R&D, and Kemira's PFAS-removal brief are enterprise contracts large enough to reset the growth-capital case, and US growth investors are faster at repricing when enterprise traction signals product-market fit.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    A successful CuspAI close at $2.6bn resets UK AI-materials valuation benchmarks and is likely to attract further foreign capital into Cambridge's materials-science cluster within six to twelve months.

    Short term · Reported
  • Risk

    The round remains open and unconfirmed; a failure to close at the reported valuation, or at all, would damage the materials-AI narrative and may chill the wider UK deeptech valuation environment given how closely this round has been covered.

    Immediate · Reported
  • Opportunity

    PFAS-removal materials face a compliance-driven commercial demand curve from EU Water Framework Directive enforcement beginning in 2025–26; CuspAI's Kemira work positions it ahead of several years of regulation-mandated purchasing.

    Medium term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #9 · Private money rebuilds Britain's seed tier

Sifted· 24 Jun 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.