A Shanghai-backed investment vehicle has helped artificial intelligence (AI) firm Stepfun raise “hundreds of millions of dollars” in the start-up‘s latest funding round, as more Chinese local governments extend support for the technology‘s domestic development.

Fortera Capital, a private-equity firm under the Shanghai State-owned Capital Investment Co (SSCIC), led Stepfun’s recent series B financing, according to Fortera’s WeChat post on Monday.

Chinese video-gaming and social-media giant Tencent Holdings as well as Qiming Venture Partners – an early investor in ByteDance, Xiaomi and Meituan – also took part in Stepfun’s second financing round, according to a report by Shanghai Securities News, a local financial media outlet owned by Xinhua News Agency.

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Shanghai-based Stepfun, which was founded in April last year, will use the new funding to develop foundational AI models – focused on multimodal capabilities and complex reasoning – and strengthen the start-up’s consumer-oriented product portfolio, according to Fortera’s WeChat post.

The latest initiative by Shanghai’s municipal government reflects the city’s growing efforts to bolster technological innovation in strategically important industries.

Visitors check out artificial intelligence models displayed on multiple screens during the 2024 World AI Conference in Shanghai last July. Photo: Xinhua alt=Visitors check out artificial intelligence models displayed on multiple screens during the 2024 World AI Conference in Shanghai last July. Photo: Xinhua>

In March, mainland China’s commercial and financial hub announced plans to set up a 100 billion yuan (US$13.8 billion) fund of funds to support start-ups in the fields of AI, biotechnology and semiconductors. A fund of funds pools capital into a broader portfolio of investment funds, rather than ploughing money directly into stocks, bonds or other securities.

SSCIC said it is actively implementing a national strategy and aims to foster the development of an internationally competitive AI industry cluster in Shanghai, according to Fortera’s WeChat post.

Stepfun, founded by Microsoft Asia Research Institute’s former chief scientist Jiang Daxin, is one of a growing number of Chinese AI start-ups trying to catch up with innovation by US peers. Stepfun, which launched the Step-1V multimodal large language model with over 100 billion parameters, is testing its Step-2 model that boasts more than 1 trillion parameters.

In AI, the higher number of parameters is pivotal in enabling a large language model – the technology behind generative AI services like ChatGPT – to adapt to more complex data patterns and make precise predictions.

Stepfun’s successful funding exercise comes more than a week after start-up Zhipu AI raised 3 billion yuan in a funding round led by various state-backed investment vehicles. The start-up also counts Big Tech firms Alibaba Group Holding and Tencent, as well as prominent venture capital firms Qiming Venture and Legend Capital as investors. Alibaba owns the South China Morning Post.

Zhipu AI was valued at 20 billion yuan after its previous financing round in September that was led by Beijing Zhongguancun Science City Innovation Development, a state-backed investment vehicle.

This article originally appeared in the South China Morning Post (SCMP), the most authoritative voice reporting on China and Asia for more than a century. For more SCMP stories, please explore the SCMP app or visit the SCMP’s Facebook and Twitter pages. Copyright © 2024 South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Source: finance.yahoo.com

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