Mistral AI seeks to raise €3B at €20B valuation as Europe’s AI race heats up Mistral AI is seeking to raise approximately €3 billion in new funding at a €20 billion valuation, nearly doubling its valuation from its Series C round last year. The Paris-based startup, founded in 2023 by former Meta and Google DeepMind researchers, has become Europe’s leading challenger to OpenAI. The funding push underscores the escalating AI race in Europe and the convergence of semiconductor and AI supply chains, with key backers including ASML and Nvidia. Mistral AI seeks to raise €3B at €20B valuation as Europe’s AI race heats up The Paris-based startup would nearly double its valuation from last year's Series C if the new round closes successfully Mistral AI, the French startup that has become Europe’s most prominent answer to OpenAI, is looking to raise roughly €3 billion in fresh funding at a €20 billion valuation. If the round closes, it would represent a massive leap from the company’s €11.7 billion post-money valuation just months ago. From zero to €20 billion in three years Mistral AI was founded in 2023 by Arthur Mensch, Guillaume Lample, and Timothée Lacroix, all of whom brought serious pedigree from stints at Meta and Google DeepMind. In June 2024, Mistral completed a €600 million Series B that valued the company at €5.8 billion. Then came September 2025, when the company pulled in €1.7 billion in a Series C round. That round was led by ASML, the Dutch semiconductor equipment giant, which picked up an 11% stake for €1.3 billion. The roster of backers includes Nvidia, Andreessen Horowitz, General Catalyst, and Bpifrance, the French public investment bank. By early 2026, Mistral’s cumulative equity funding had exceeded €2.8 billion, and the company had also tapped debt markets, securing $830 million in March 2026 specifically earmarked for data center expansion in the Paris area. Why this matters beyond the AI bubble The ASML investment from the Series C is worth examining more closely. ASML makes the extreme ultraviolet lithography machines that are essential for manufacturing advanced chips. Its decision to take a significant stake in an AI model company signals something important: the semiconductor and AI supply chains are converging. Nvidia’s continued involvement tells a similar story. The chipmaker has been strategically investing in AI startups around the world, essentially seeding its own customer base. Every dollar Mistral spends on training runs is, to some degree, revenue flowing back to Nvidia’s GPU business. What this means for investors Mistral’s $830 million debt financing for data centers, combined with its equity raises, suggests the company is burning cash at a rate that demands continuous fundraising. A €20 billion valuation sets a high bar for future exits or public offerings. Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy https://cryptobriefing.com/editorial-policy/ .