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Groq Raises $650 Million to Expand AI Inference Cloud

Targets 200 MW Capacity by 2027

Groq announced a $650 million growth financing round to accelerate expansion of its AI inference cloud business, strengthen its global infrastructure footprint, and deploy additional capacity based on its LPU (Language Processing Unit) technology. The round was led by Disruptive and Infinitum, with participation from existing investors. Groq said the funding will support the buildout of its AI inference cloud as demand grows for production-scale AI services.

The company currently operates 13 data centers across North America, Europe, the Middle East, and Asia-Pacific. Groq said its platform serves more than five million developers and processes trillions of AI tokens each week. The company plans to use the new capital to expand deployment of its latest inference infrastructure, including systems based on NVIDIA’s LPX platform, which incorporates Groq inference technology under a licensing agreement announced in late 2025. Groq said it expects to scale toward 200 MW of deployed AI infrastructure capacity by the end of 2027.

Groq also announced several additions to its executive team as it focuses on commercial expansion. Alan Rice joins as Chief Operating Officer after leadership roles at xAI and Meta’s data center organization. Sinclair Schuller will become Chief Technology Officer, while Rakesh Malhotra will assume the role of Chief Product Officer. The company said the expanded leadership team brings experience spanning hyperscale infrastructure, enterprise software, cloud platforms, and AI operations as Groq seeks to expand adoption of its inference cloud platform.

“Today, the company has a proven global platform, a world-class leadership team, and a clear strategy focused on one of the most important opportunities in technology: AI inference at scale,” said Alex Davis, Chairman of Groq and Founder and CEO of Disruptive.

🌐 Analysis: Groq occupies a unique position in the AI infrastructure landscape as one of the few companies deploying a proprietary processor architecture specifically designed for AI inference at scale. Founded by former Google TPU engineers, the company developed its LPU architecture as an alternative to conventional GPU-based processing. Groq’s recent licensing relationship with NVIDIA represents a notable shift in the AI infrastructure market, bringing together a specialized inference architecture with NVIDIA’s broader AI ecosystem. The company’s target of 200 MW by 2027 also places it among a growing group of AI infrastructure providers measuring expansion plans in power capacity rather than server counts, reflecting the industry’s increasing focus on power availability as a primary constraint on AI deployment.

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