AI company Anthropic has raised $13 billion in Series F funding, with its post-currency valuation of up to $183 billion – the company said it will use to grow its corporate adoption, deepen security research and support international expansion.
ICONIQ is co-led with Fidelity Management and Research and Lightspeed Venture Partners, Company’s blog posts. Other backers include a range of institutional investors, VCS, sovereign wealth funds, private equity and asset managers such as Altimeter, Baillie Gifford, Blackrock, Blackstone, Blackstone, Coatue, D1 Capital Partners, Insight Partners, Insight Partners, Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan, Qatar Investment Investment International, Qatar Investment Authority, and more.
“We are seeing an exponential increase in demand across our customer base,” Anthropic CFO Krishna Rao said in the post. “This financing demonstrates investors’ great confidence in our financial performance and the strength to work with us to continue to drive our unprecedented growth.”
The last of anthropomorphism Raised $3.5 billion In March 2025, the stock was valued at $61.5 billion.
The latest fundraising comes as reports that the anthropomorphic deal is about to reach $3 billion to $5 billion in fundraising, with a valuation of $170 billion. It’s also an impressive growth for AI startups, which reported annual recurring revenue to $5 billion in 2025 from API use and enterprise adoption in 2025.
“Now, with anthropomorphism serving 300,000 commercial customers, our number of big accounts (each representing over $100,000 of running interest rates) has increased nearly seven times over the past year,” the company said in a company blog post.
Claude Code is also a favorite among developers and one of the main driving forces for artificial growth. The company said its Vibe coded products have generated more than $500 million in running rate revenue, with usage increasing by more than 10 times over the past three months.
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But, as its CEO Dario Amodei recently admitted in a memo, it takes more money to keep growing and compete with competitors like OpenAI, Cursor and others wired. He said he was not “excited” about making money from sovereign wealth funds in a dictatorial government, but it was difficult to run a business by excluding “bad guys” from investments.
This story is developing. Come back for updates…