Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
UK Startups and Innovation
13MAY

Nscale raises $2bn in record European round

3 min read
20:05UTC

The UK-founded AI infrastructure company secured the largest venture round in European history, valued at £11.7bn. Its investor roster and board tell a story about where British AI sovereignty actually sits.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Britain's largest AI company is British in address but American in governance and capital.

Nscale, the UK-founded AI infrastructure company, raised $2bn in a Series C in March 2026, the largest venture round in European history 1. Founded in 2024 and now valued at £11.7bn, Nscale operates a vertically integrated stack from accelerator chips to data centres. On paper, a British success of extraordinary Velocity.

The investor list complicates that reading. Lead backers Aker ASA and 8090 Industries are Norwegian, but the participant roster reads like a directory of US finance and tech: Nvidia, Dell, Citadel, Jane Street, Point72. The board appointments are American: Nick Clegg (formerly Meta's VP of Global Affairs), Sheryl Sandberg (formerly Meta's COO), Susan Decker (formerly Yahoo's president). Nscale is targeting a 2026 IPO, almost certainly in the United States given its investor base.

Three days after the round closed, ministers announced the Sovereign AI Unit with £500m and an explicit mandate to build "UK-owned AI infrastructure." Whether Nscale qualifies as sovereign under the unit's criteria is a question neither the government nor Nscale has addressed publicly. The UK's highest-valued AI company is British in domicile but American in governance and capitalisation. The Sovereign AI Unit may end up building a parallel infrastructure ecosystem rather than backing the one that already exists.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Nscale is a two-year-old British company that builds the computer servers and data centres that power artificial intelligence. It just raised more money in a single funding round than any European company ever has: $2bn, which is roughly £1.6bn. The money came mostly from American investors, including Nvidia (the chip maker whose hardware Nscale uses) and several large US hedge funds. The new board members are also American: Nick Clegg, who ran Facebook's policy globally, and Sheryl Sandberg, who was Facebook's chief operating officer. The question this raises is: is Nscale a British company? It is registered in the UK, but it is governed and funded by Americans. The government is now spending £500m trying to build "British-owned" AI infrastructure. Whether Nscale counts as that, nobody has said.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The structural cause is the UK public equity market's inability to absorb high-growth pre-revenue technology companies at scale. The London Stock Exchange's tech market share relative to Nasdaq has declined consistently since the late 1990s.

UK institutional investors, constrained by Solvency II-derived capital requirements and liability-matching obligations, systematically underweight early-stage and growth-stage equities. The result is that UK founders with US investor backing gravitate to US listings where their existing investors have deeper secondary market relationships and where comparable companies trade at higher multiples.

A secondary cause is the absence of a UK-equivalent to the US CHIPS and Science Act's ownership requirements. The US mandates domestic ownership and control for federally funded semiconductor and AI infrastructure projects. The UK has no equivalent statutory framework, which means the Sovereign AI Unit is deploying discretionary investment capital against a market where the largest actor was capitalised without any domestic-ownership condition.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    A US IPO would remove Nscale from UK equity indices and pension fund eligible investment lists, transferring wealth-creation from UK to US investors.

    Short term · 0.7
  • Consequence

    The Sovereign AI Unit may face the choice of investing in Nscale (legitimising US governance) or building a competing portfolio from scratch.

    Short term · 0.65
  • Precedent

    Nscale's governance structure sets a template for UK AI infrastructure: British domicile, American board, international capital, no ownership constraint.

    Medium term · 0.75
First Reported In

Update #1 · State capital floods in, seed money drains

BusinessCloud· 13 Apr 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Australian Department of Defence (AUKUS AI for Acoustics partner)
Australian Department of Defence (AUKUS AI for Acoustics partner)
Rowden Technologies holds active AUKUS AI for Acoustics contracts with the UK, US, and Australian defence establishments. The NWF's £25m investment in Rowden on 13 May brings UK sovereign capital directly into a trilateral programme, which from Canberra's perspective places additional UK government skin-in-the-game on a programme Australia co-funds and co-develops.
Sofinnova Partners (European VC co-investor in Cytospire Series A)
Sofinnova Partners (European VC co-investor in Cytospire Series A)
Sofinnova participated alongside the BBB in Cytospire's oversubscribed £61m Series A on 5 May, demonstrating that the BBB's expanded direct mandate is attracting established European specialist biotech funds rather than replacing them. European VCs see the BBB's cornerstone position as a signal reducing UK biotech execution risk rather than crowding out private capital.
Temasek (Singapore sovereign co-investor in Isomorphic Series B)
Temasek (Singapore sovereign co-investor in Isomorphic Series B)
Singapore's Temasek co-invested alongside the UK's SAIU in Isomorphic's $2.1bn round, treating the same Alphabet-majority company as an acceptable sovereign co-investment target. Temasek's participation normalises the structure: multiple sovereign wealth funds backed the same round, strengthening the precedent that UK-headquartered Alphabet subsidiaries qualify for state investment.
Alphabet / Google (majority Isomorphic shareholder, Mountain View)
Alphabet / Google (majority Isomorphic shareholder, Mountain View)
Alphabet co-invested via GV and CapitalG in the same Isomorphic Series B round that received UK sovereign backing, placing US corporate capital and UK public capital in the same syndicate without any governance asymmetry. SAIU's minority stake validates Isomorphic's strategic value without constraining Alphabet's control over IP, geography, or exit decisions.
DSIT / Liz Kendall, Secretary of State for Science
DSIT / Liz Kendall, Secretary of State for Science
DSIT framed the Isomorphic investment as backing a British-founded and headquartered company advancing UK AI capability, and described the nine-day sovereign deployment sprint as evidence the government's industrial strategy is operational. The department has not addressed the ownership question, the absence of eligibility criteria, or the pace-versus-doctrine tension in the BBB mandate.
Beauhurst / UK startup data analysts
Beauhurst / UK startup data analysts
Five sub-£50m rounds closed in nine days with zero VCT-backed angel networks on any cap table, confirming the post-cut investor map is forming fast in the £4m–£40m band. The gap is structural: 36.7% of university spinouts raised below £500,000 in 2025, a tier neither the SAIU nor the BBB direct mandate touches.