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Legal AI Pioneer Clio Hits $5 Billion Valuation After $500 Million Funding Round

Clio, a Canadian legal artificial intelligence firm, announced on Monday that it has raised $500 million in fresh funding led by New Enterprise Associates (NEA), boosting its valuation to $5 billion.

The Vancouver-based company, founded in 2008 by Jack Newton and Rian Gauvreau, develops AI-powered tools that help law firms and legal departments manage cases, automate workflows, conduct research, and streamline operations. Clio’s platform is currently used by legal professionals in over 130 countries.

The funding round also saw participation from existing backers TCV, Goldman Sachs Asset Management, Sixth Street Growth, and JMI Equity, highlighting continued investor confidence in the booming market for AI productivity tools.

In addition to the equity raise, Clio secured a $350 million debt facility led by Blackstone and Blue Owl Capital, which will help fund AI product development and future strategic acquisitions.

The new valuation marks a significant leap from last year’s $3 billion figure, underscoring the surging demand for AI solutions in professional services, as firms increasingly turn to automation to improve efficiency and reduce costs.

Venture capital interest in legal tech and generative AI has soared this year, as companies across industries race to integrate intelligent systems capable of handling administrative, analytical, and compliance tasks once performed by human professionals.

Nvidia-backed AI lab Lila Sciences hits $1.3 billion valuation after new funding

Lila Sciences, a fast-growing AI startup focused on scientific discovery, has raised $115 million in an extension of its Series A round led by Nvidia’s venture arm, pushing its valuation above $1.3 billion, the company told Reuters. The latest investment brings Lila’s total Series A funding to $350 million and its cumulative capital raised to $550 million, underscoring investors’ confidence in AI for science.

Founded in 2023 by Flagship Pioneering, Lila aims to create what it calls “scientific superintelligence” — a network of specialized AI systems paired with automated laboratories capable of running continuous experiments. Its investors include General Catalyst and a subsidiary of the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority.

Lila said the funds will speed up the rollout of its AI Science Factories, vast facilities equipped with robotic instruments controlled by AI. The company recently signed a 235,500-square-foot lease in Cambridge, Massachusetts, one of the largest new lab spaces in the Greater Boston area this year.

The startup plans to open its AI platform to commercial customers, allowing companies in energy, semiconductors, and pharmaceuticals to use its automated systems for scientific discovery. Unlike traditional AI labs focused on internet data, Lila’s approach generates proprietary experimental data, which it says is key to the next era of AI-driven innovation.

CEO Geoffrey von Maltzahn said the company’s mission is to accelerate the scientific method itself. “It will set in motion the scientific method in a new form,” he said, describing how Lila’s technology has already produced thousands of discoveries across life sciences, chemistry, and materials research.

Elon Musk’s xAI closing in on $20 billion raise backed by Nvidia chips

Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence startup, xAI, is nearing a massive $20 billion capital raise tied to Nvidia’s cutting-edge GPU technology, according to Bloomberg News. The report says the financing will combine both equity and debt, with Nvidia investing up to $2 billion as part of the equity tranche.

The funds are linked to Nvidia’s graphics processing units (GPUs), which xAI plans to deploy in its upcoming Colossus 2 data center. The financing structure reportedly includes around $7.5 billion in equity and as much as $12.5 billion in debt, channeled through a special purpose vehicle (SPV) designed to purchase Nvidia chips.

Neither Nvidia nor xAI has commented publicly on the deal. However, the move signals a deepening relationship between the world’s leading AI hardware maker and one of its most ambitious software challengers.

In September, Musk dismissed reports claiming xAI was raising $10 billion at a $200 billion valuation, though he confirmed the company would seek capital “in the coming months.” Founded in July 2023, xAI aims to build an alternative to OpenAI’s ChatGPT, focusing on developing artificial general intelligence systems with tighter integration to Musk’s broader tech ecosystem.