Celebras CEO Andrew Feldman will speak to the media on March 12, 2024 at the Coroboa office in Santa Clara, California.
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Celebras CEO Andrew Feldman admitted that his artificial intelligence chip maker made a mistake last week when he didn’t immediately explain his decision to withdraw his IPO registration.
Posts on LinkedIn Late Sunday, Feldman wrote that the company still wants to be made public, but has changed significantly since its first submission a year ago. The company wants to revise some of its prospectus before selling its shares to the public.
“Given the business has improved in meaningful ways, we have made it possible to refile strategic information, including the latest finances, AI landscapes that rapidly change strategic information, including our approach to this,” writes Feldman.
A few days before filing a withdrawal notice on Friday, Celebras announced its $1.1 billion funding at a $8.1 billion valuation. Some of the new round investors, including Tiger Global and 1789 Capital, were partnered by Donald Trump Jr. and were not named in the 2024 filing.
“We made this call because it’s the best benefit for investors, partners and teams, and we will help potential investors better understand the value of their business when they enter the open market,” writes Feldman.
In the prospectus, Celebras characterized its position as a company that produces large chips for training and execution of AI models. This year, the company added its cloud business to operate a data center that can handle incoming requests from AI models.
What remains is Celebras’ claim that the hardware surpasses the graphics processing unit (GPU). nvidia It’s dominant, but where are you? Advanced Micro Devices You’re about to catch up. AMD said Monday that Openai had pledged to set up a set worth up to 6 gigawatts of its AI processors, potentially owning 10% of the chip maker.
Watch: Celebrus CEO: This is why our chips are a more efficient alternative to nvidia

