Nscale raises 2bn Series C at 146bn valuation


When Josh Payne founded Nscale, the company was barely a year old, and the world's appetite for GPU compute had not yet tipped into anything approaching panic. That was 2024. By March 2026, his company will have closed a $2 billion Series C, carry a $14.6 billion valuation, and have recruited three of the most recognisable names in global technology and politics to its board.

The question is no longer whether Nscale can raise money. It is whether the infrastructure it is racing to build will be ready before the market moves on.

Nscale announced the round today, led jointly by Aker ASA, the Norwegian industrial conglomerate that also led its $1.1 billion Series B in September 2025, and 8090 Industries, a Dallas-based industrial technology fund co-founded by Rayyan Islam.

Additional investors in the round include Astra Capital Management, Citadel, Dell, Jane Street, Lenovo, Linden Advisors, Nokia, NVIDIA, and Point72. Goldman Sachs and J.P. Morgan acted as joint placement agents, and the raise is inclusive of the pre-Series C SAFE that Nscale closed in October 2025.

The company says the round is the largest Series C ever completed in Europe.

The infrastructure play

Nscale's proposition is vertically integrated AI infrastructure: GPU compute, networking, data services, and orchestration software, delivered from its own and colocated data centres across Europe, North America, and Asia. The pitch is that the bottleneck in the AI economy is not demand; everyone wants compute, but the ability to deploy capacity reliably and at scale.

Nscale's data centres are designed from first principles to handle GPU-dense workloads rather than retrofitting facilities built for traditional cloud computing.

The company has moved quickly. Since its Series B in September 2025, it has signed a $1.4 billion delayed-draw term loan backed by GPUs, which it announced in February 2026, and has secured large-scale contracts with Microsoft, including plans for a facility in Texas targeting 104,000 NVIDIA GB300 GPUs.

Its data centre footprint spans Norway, the UK, Portugal, Iceland, and the US, with its Norwegian presence anchored by the Glomfjord and Narvik sites. In July 2025, it announced the Stargate Norway project alongside Aker and OpenAI, targeting 100,000 NVIDIA GPUs by the end of 2026.

Alongside the fundraising, Nscale has also resolved a structural question that had been hanging over the Norway operations. The Aker–Nscale joint venture, announced in July 2025, will be wound into Nscale as a wholly owned entity.

Aker remains a leading shareholder, its CEO, Øyvind Eriksen, continues to sit on the board, and the company says all existing projects under the joint venture remain fully operational. The practical effect is to put delivery and governance under a single roof.

“This step strengthens execution by putting delivery and governance under one roof, while keeping continuity for the people and projects already underway,” Eriksen said in a statement. “We have full confidence in Nscale's ability to deliver responsibly in Norway over the long term.”

The new board

The three board appointments announced today are striking in different ways. Sheryl Sandberg, the former Meta COO who stepped down from the company's board in 2024, is the co-founder of Sandberg Bernthal Venture Partners, an early-stage fund she has been building since 2021.

Her addition brings operational credibility from a company that scaled to hundreds of billions in revenue during her tenure, and, notably, deep expertise in the advertising and data infrastructure that underpins modern AI products.

Susan Decker, former president of Yahoo and CEO of the university community platform Raftr, brings financial acumen and a long record of corporate governance, including serving as lead director of Berkshire Hathaway.

Her Berkshire role gives Nscale a board member with rare experience overseeing a conglomerate that owns businesses across energy, infrastructure, and financial services, the sectors Nscale is increasingly operating in.

Nick Clegg is the most overtly political appointment. The former UK Deputy Prime Minister and Meta President of Global Affairs joined Hiro Capital as a General Partner in December 2025, where he focuses on spatial computing and AI investment across Europe.

He joins Nscale's board, bringing a combination of European regulatory fluency, Meta-era experience of AI governance debates, and political networks that could prove valuable as Nscale pursues sovereign AI mandates and government contracts across the UK and EU.

Payne, speaking in the press release, framed the round as more than a fundraiser. “Nscale is leading this buildout,” he said, describing the company's ambition as building “the foundation that the market sits on, the engine of superintelligence.” The language is bullish even by AI infrastructure standards.

The harder questions

Nscale has raised over $4.5 billion in equity rounds since its Series B in September 2025. That velocity would be remarkable for any company; for one incorporated only in 2024, it is extraordinary. What it also means is that the gap between capital raised and assets deployed is wide and growing.

Building the infrastructure that Nscale has committed to, across multiple continents, at GPU densities that require bespoke facility design, is an execution problem of considerable complexity.

The company's own published data centre pipeline and the Microsoft contract details that have been reported suggest it is making real progress. But significant infrastructure projects routinely fall behind schedule, and Nscale has not yet had a delivery cycle long enough to fully validate its operational model at the scale it is now targeting.

The $2 billion will be used to accelerate global deployments, expand engineering and operations teams, and strengthen the platform. Nscale's IPO ambitions, which CEO Payne has previously flagged for as early as 2026, add another variable.

Whether markets are ready to absorb a listing from a company this young, at this valuation, will depend on whether the compute economy continues to grow at the pace of the last two years, and whether Nscale can demonstrate that it is not just a capital vehicle but an operator.

The board hires suggest the company knows the next phase is about governance and credibility as much as fundraising. Whether Sandberg, Decker, and Clegg can help deliver that remains to be seen.