Investment in generative artificial intelligence will continue to be hot in 2024, with global venture capital reaching a record high of US$56 billion, nearly tripling year-on-year. Giants such as OpenAI, Anthropic and xAI continue to lead the way, receiving huge amounts of financing and promoting the development of the industry. In the fourth quarter, investment volume soared to US$31.1 billion, and multiple large-scale financing cases emerged, such as Databricks’ US$10 billion Series J financing and xAI’s US$6 billion Series C financing. However, the proportion of M&A activity is still small and does not include "acquisition and employment" transactions by giants such as Google, Microsoft and Amazon, such as Google's acquisition of Character AI employees and technology.
In 2024, the investment craze in generative AI (Generative AI) remains unabated, with global investment reaching a new high. According to data from financial tracking agency PitchBook, global generative artificial intelligence companies raised a total of US$56 billion in venture capital last year and participated in 885 transactions. Compared with US$29.1 billion in 2023, the growth rate is as high as 192%.
In this field, well-known companies such as OpenAI, Anthropic and xAI continue to attract large investments and continuously launch new products to promote the development of the industry. In the fourth quarter of 2024, investment volume soared to US$31.1 billion, including many large-scale financing cases, such as Databricks’ US$10 billion Series J financing, xAI’s US$6 billion Series C financing, and Anthropic’s US$4 billion strategy to acquire Amazon Investment, OpenAI’s $6.6 billion financing.
However, despite the unabated financing boom, mergers and acquisitions still account for a smaller proportion of generative AI investment, at approximately $951 million. It should be noted that this data does not include "acquire-for-hire" transactions by companies such as Google, Microsoft and Amazon. For example, Google acquired most of the staff and technology of chatbot startup Character AI for $2.7 billion, while Microsoft acquired Inflection’s AI model and hired its CEO Mustafa for $650 million.・Suleiman.
U.S. companies attracted the majority of generative AI investments in 2024, with overseas startups receiving only $6.2 billion in venture capital. Despite this, some international startups have performed well, such as Beijing-based Moonshot AI, which received US$1 billion in financing in February, France's Mistral, which raised approximately US$640 million in June, Germany's DeepL, which received US$300 million in financing in May, and MiniMax from Shanghai received US$600 million in financing in March.
Looking ahead to 2025, industry analyst Ali Javaheri warns that the generative AI market may become oversaturated, with many startups competing in similar verticals. He pointed out that four companies have developed AI coding assistants and received more than $100 million in financing in 2024. In addition, many generative media startups such as Black Forest Labs and ElevenLabs have received tens of millions of dollars in investment at high valuations.
Industry sustainability faces challenges as investor pressure for sustainable revenue growth increases. Technical difficulties and huge computational costs could put additional pressure on generative AI startups, Javaheri said. He noted that only well-funded startups can keep up with innovative models.
Thankfully, infrastructure-level generative AI companies are doing well in 2024. Data center startups such as Crusoe and Lambda also performed well in financing, receiving US$600 million and US$320 million respectively. Investment firm KKR predicts that global demand for data centers will drive related spending to $250 billion per year.
The investment boom in generative AI in 2024 demonstrates the huge development potential and market opportunities in this field, but it also heralds fierce competition and challenges in the future. The industry needs to pay attention to sustainable development and seek to break through technological bottlenecks in order to continue to prosper in the future.