Fermi Files for U.S. IPO Amid AI-Driven Data Center Boom

Fermi, a Texas-based data center developer co-founded by former U.S. Energy Secretary Rick Perry, has filed for a U.S. initial public offering (IPO), joining a growing wave of companies tapping investor demand for new listings. The filing comes as Wall Street’s IPO market rebounds strongly post-Labor Day.

Fermi plans to build the world’s largest energy and data complex, integrating nuclear, natural gas, and solar power to meet surging energy needs from artificial intelligence. This marks one of the first major nuclear-backed investments since President Donald Trump’s May executive orders to accelerate nuclear licensing and boost U.S. capacity from 100 GW to 400 GW by 2050.

The company, still pre-revenue just nine months after its founding, closed a $100 million round in August, led by Macquarie Group. It projects rapid market expansion, citing forecasts that the global generative AI sector will grow from $64B in 2023 to $457B by 2027 (Bloomberg Intelligence).

Fermi has applied to list on the Nasdaq under the ticker FRMI and also intends to pursue a London Stock Exchange listing. UBS Investment Bank, Cantor, and Mizuho are acting as bookrunners for the deal.

The IPO comes alongside other high-profile listings this week, including StubHub and Netskope, both launching roadshows to raise hundreds of millions.

Netskope Targets $6.5 Billion Valuation in Upcoming U.S. IPO

Netskope, a cloud-based cybersecurity company, announced plans to raise up to $813 million in its U.S. initial public offering, aiming for a valuation of up to $6.5 billion. The IPO comes amid a rebound in listings after April’s tariff-driven market slump.

The Santa Clara-based firm will sell 47.8 million shares priced between $15 and $17 each, listing on the Nasdaq under the ticker “NTSK”.

Founded in 2012, Netskope provides cloud security solutions that protect apps, websites, and data from cyber threats. The company operates in the secure access service edge (SASE) market, competing with heavyweights like Palo Alto Networks and Zscaler. Gartner projects the SASE sector will grow from $7B in 2022 to $25B by 2027, reflecting rising demand for AI-powered cybersecurity amid more sophisticated attacks and the cloud shift.

Netskope’s client base includes Qualcomm and BMO, spanning mid-sized firms to global enterprises. Its last funding round in 2021, led by ICONIQ, Sequoia, and Accel, valued the firm at $7.5B.

The IPO follows rival Rubrik’s 2023 debut, whose shares have more than doubled since going public, underscoring investor appetite for cybersecurity plays.

Morgan Stanley and J.P. Morgan are lead underwriters.

Quantum Computing Firm Infleqtion to Go Public via $1.8B SPAC Deal

Infleqtion, a quantum computing and precision sensor company, announced Monday it will go public through a merger with Churchill Capital Corp X, a SPAC led by Wall Street dealmaker Michael Klein, valuing the startup at $1.8 billion pre-investment.

The transaction is expected to provide Infleqtion with over $540 million before costs, including $416 million from the SPAC’s trust account and more than $125 million in PIPE funding from investors such as Maverick Capital, Counterpoint Global, and Glynn Capital.

The merged company will list under the ticker “INFQ” on a North American exchange, with closing expected by late 2025 or early 2026.

Founded in 2007, Infleqtion has raised $283 million to date and employs about 185 staff. Its quantum systems and sensors are already in use by Nvidia, NASA, the U.S. Department of Defense, and the UK government. The company reported $29M in trailing 12-month revenue as of June 30 and projects $50M in booked and awarded business by end-2025.

Proceeds from the deal will accelerate product development and expand quantum applications in AI, national security, and space exploration.

Quantum peers IonQ, Rigetti, and D-Wave have also gone public via SPACs in recent years, though with mixed results amid challenges scaling the technology commercially. Infleqtion hopes its government partnerships and enterprise clients give it an edge in bridging R&D with practical deployment.