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.
