Mistral has raised $830 million to build AI centers in Europe powered by NVIDIA. It is the first round of debt financing for the French company and responds to the growing demand for alternatives to American technology companies.
Mistral had already announced plans to invest €4 billion in building AI infrastructure, including facilities in France and Sweden. These investments occur at a time of rapid growth for the company, thanks to the search by companies and governments for European alternatives. sovereigns to large American groups such as Microsoft, Amazon and Google.
“Expanding our infrastructure in Europe is essential to empower our customers and ensure that innovation and autonomy in AI remain a priority in Europe”said CEO Arthur Mensch. «We will continue to invest in this area, given the growing and sustained demand from governments, companies and institutions research organizations looking to build their own custom AI environment, rather than relying on third-party cloud providers.”.
Mistral advances and with it Europe
The Paris-based group, valued at almost €12 billion last year following a €1.7 billion equity financing round led by chip equipment maker ASML, is on track to surpass $1 billion in annual recurring revenue by the end of the year. Part of Mistral’s proposition for enterprise customers is that it can offer a comprehensive and simplified suite of products, from Custom AI software to cloud computing infrastructure necessary for its operation.
Just over half of Mistral’s revenue comes from Europe, where demand for sovereign AI has grown since Trump returned to the White House. Concerns about American foreign policy and the Trump administration’s threats to reduce support for European allies have given greater urgency to calls for a call technological decouplingboosting local providers of alternatives to Silicon Valley-based services.
Mistral’s debt financing will go towards its first data center in Bruyères-le-Châtel, near Paris, which is scheduled to launch at the end of June. This center will house 13,800 GB300 accelerators, NVIDIA’s high-end AI infrastructure. The financing is backed by a group of mainly French banks, including Bpifrance, BNP Paribas, HSBC and MUFG. The company plans to build and secure a total AI computing capacity of 200 MW throughout Europe by the end of 2027.
While the magnitude of its funding and infrastructure development lag far behind its Silicon Valley rivals such as OpenAI and Anthropic, Mistral is one of the few European companies developing cutting-edge AI models. Earlier this month, Yann LeCun, former chief AI scientist at Meta, raised more than $1 billion for his new startup, Advanced Machine Intelligence Labsalso based in Paris.
