Nvidia is buying roughly US$500m of preference shares in Firmus, an Australian "neocloud" that rents AI compute capacity, ahead of a planned ASX float at a US$15.5b private valuation.
Nvidia, the publicly traded US chip designer whose GPUs sit at the centre of the AI build-out, is taking a roughly US$500 million equity stake in Australian "neocloud" operator Firmus Technologies, inside a US$2 billion pre-IPO round that values the company at about US$15.5 billion ahead of a planned 2026 listing on the ASX. Nvidia is the largest single investor in the round, according to AFR Street Talk.
Firmus is an Australian AI-cloud operator that rents GPU capacity to AI labs and enterprises, in a model the industry calls "neocloud" to distinguish it from the Amazon-style hyperscalers. Nvidia already sells the company large volumes of chips; with this cheque, the chip vendor also becomes an owner.
The AFR report says the stake is structured as preference shares designed to convert into ordinary equity at the ASX float. In plain terms, Nvidia pays a set price now for shares that carry priority on dividends and on proceeds if the company is sold or wound up, and that automatically become ordinary stock once the listing completes. The mechanism gives Nvidia exposure to the listing-day valuation with downside protection in between.
The two companies are already co-building a 170,000-GPU AI Factory Campus in Australia, a project underwritten by an earlier US$10 billion financing led by Blackstone and Coatue to scale energy-efficient AI infrastructure. Firmus also hosts Nvidia's DGX Cloud Lepton platform for regional AI customers across Asia-Pacific. Nvidia is now also on the cap table.
Whether this is the start of a broader pattern, where chip vendors take equity stakes in their AI-cloud customers rather than just supplying chips, or a one-off tailored to Firmus's planned float, will be answered by what the prospectus and listing timetable reveal. The preference-share mechanism here is, in either case, a template other neocloud operators can copy.
Firmus has been raising at speed. Earlier this year it closed a US$505 million round at a US$5.5 billion valuation ahead of the float. The new round values the business at roughly three times that April mark, with Nvidia's cheque underwriting a meaningful share of the step-up. The price implies confidence that GPU rental capacity, valued in the public market, will command more than it does in private deals today.
Two caveats matter. First, AFR is a single source for the deal terms; the prospectus, a US-style Form F-1 filing, or an ASX cleansing statement will be where independent verification first appears. Second, the US$15.5 billion figure is a pre-listing private mark, not a market capitalisation: it is the price implied by this round, not the price public investors will pay on day one, and that price typically moves.
The question on the listing, as one investor commentary puts it, is whether the US$15.5 billion mark reflects structural demand or sector hype. The preference-share structure softens Nvidia's downside but does nothing for outside investors who buy at the float. The spread between the private price Nvidia is paying and the eventual public price is where the next argument will live.
The watch items now are concrete: the formal launch of the ASX offer, the price range disclosed in the prospectus, and the proportion of preference shares that convert at listing. Each will show whether Nvidia's template, chip vendor as equity investor in its own customer layer, is a one-off or a pattern the rest of the neocloud sector is about to copy.