đ Cohere, la startup canadienne dâIA, lĂšve 500 millions $ Ă une valorisation de 6,8 milliards $

Une pépite canadienne défie les géants de la tech.
Cohere, la startup spécialisée en intelligence artificielle, vient de boucler un tour de table monumental. 500 millions de dollars levés, propulsant sa valorisation à 6,8 milliards. De quoi faire pùlir certains licornes surestimées de la Silicon Valley.
L'IA, nouveau Far West financier ?
Les investisseurs se battent pour placer leur argent dans le secteur - parfois avec plus d'enthousiasme que de jugement. Mais Cohere semble tenir la route : sa technologie de traitement du langage naturel impressionne mĂȘme les plus sceptiques.
Un avertissement pour Google et OpenAI ?
Avec cette manne, la startup pourrait bien bousculer l'ordre établi. Reste à savoir si elle saura dépenser cet argent plus intelligemment que certaines cryptomonnaies en 2021...
Cohere secures $500M funding
Cohere, a Canadian artificial intelligence start-up, has raised $500M in a fresh funding round and appointed two prominent industry figures to its executive team in a bid to expand its position as a secure alternative to American AI giants such as OpenAI and Anthropic.
The round was led by Radical Ventures and Inovia Capital, with participation from AMD Ventures, Nvidia, PSP Investments, Salesforce Ventures, and other investors.
Cohere also confirmed the hiring of Joelle Pineau, a respected academic who headed AI research at Meta until April this year, as its chief AI officer, and former Uber executive Francois Chadwick as chief financial officer.
The company has recently secured or expanded partnerships with major global brands, including the Royal Bank of Canada, Fujitsu, LG, Oracle, and Dell.
âTrust and safety is the biggest factor for our customers. Privacy and security you cannot compromise on, you canât go halfway,â Cohereâs co-founder and chief executive, Aidan Gomez, said.
Escaping AI sovereignty
Cohereâs enterprise-only model is also drawing interest from companies and governments outside the U.S. that are wary of depending solely on a small cluster of large AI firms headquartered in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Gomez noted that concerns over âAI sovereigntyâ came up prior to the recent political changes, but the concerns have become more urgent.
âSovereignty in AI has been important for a very long time, these were discussions before any changes in US politics. But in the world weâre in today itâs becoming increasingly important,â he said.
The company has doubled its annual recurring revenue to $100M since the start of 2025 and aims to reach $200M by yearâs end, according to PEOPLE familiar with its finances. This growth is due to an increase in customer adoption. Gomez noted that businesses are now deploying AI tools more broadly across their organizations rather than confining them to small pilot programmes.
In addition to the funding and hires, Cohere recently launched North, a platform designed for AI agents. The platform is aimed at enterprises seeking advanced AI capabilities without compromising data security. Cohere claims North enables companies to access state-of-the-art AI tools while retaining full control over sensitive information.
Despite its progress, Cohereâs revenues remain far smaller than those of its consumer-focused competitors. The recent $1.3B boost to its valuation is modest compared to the dramatic jumps among industry leaders. OpenAI is reportedly targeting a $500B valuation, up from $300B, while Anthropic is in talks to nearly triple its valuation to $170B.
However, investors suggest that Cohereâs lower operating costs, due in part to avoiding the expense of training and running vast general-purpose models, could make its business more sustainable.
âThe margins are quite different for Cohere,â one backer said, adding that while enterprise adoption may take longer, it often provides a steadier and more reliable revenue stream than consumer-based models.
If you're reading this, youâre already ahead. Stay there with our newsletter.