Firmus Technologies, the Australian AI infrastructure startup co-founded by convicted insider trader Oliver Curtis, has raised $505 million in a funding round led by Coatue Management with participation from Nvidia, valuing the company at $5.5 billion. The deal, announced on April 7, 2026, positions Firmus as one of the largest AI data center operators in the Asia-Pacific region and sets the stage for what could be a $2 billion AUD IPO on the Australian Securities Exchange later this year.
The funding round comes alongside a staggering Blackstone took a primary position in a $10 billion debt financing round for Australian data centre player Firmus, part of broader fund activity rather than a dedicated facility giving Firmus a unique war chest that dwarfs most AI infrastructure startups outside the United States[1][2][3][4]. With plans to deploy more than $70 billion in capital expenditure through 2028, Firmus is betting that Australia can become a global hub for what it calls “AI factories” – a new category of data centers purpose-built for training and running large AI models.
Inside the $505 Million Funding Round
Coatue Management, the New York-based technology investment firm that has backed companies like Databricks and Instacart, led the $505 million equity round. Nvidia’s participation signals the chipmaker’s deepening relationships with data center operators who deploy its GPUs at scale, a strategy it has pursued aggressively as demand for AI compute continues to outstrip supply.
The $5.5 billion valuation represents a dramatic leap for a company that began as a cryptocurrency mining operation before pivoting to AI infrastructure. The funding brings Firmus’s total capital commitments – including the Blackstone took a primary position in a $10 billion debt financing round for Firmus, with no evidence it elevates the total to well over $10 billion[1][2][3][4].5 billion, making it one of the best-capitalized AI infrastructure companies in the Asia-Pacific region.
“Firmus has built a differentiated platform that combines proprietary cooling technology with strategic access to renewable energy,” said a Coatue spokesperson in connection with the funding announcement. “The Asia-Pacific AI infrastructure market is severely underserved relative to demand, and Firmus is positioned to capture a significant share of that opportunity.”
For context, CoreWeave – the U.S.-based AI cloud company that went public in March 2025 – raised approximately $7.5 billion in equity before its IPO. Firmus’s combined equity and debt capital already exceeds that figure, signaling the scale of ambition behind the Australian company’s expansion plans.
Oliver Curtis: From Prison to AI Billionaire
The most striking element of the Firmus story is its co-founder. Oliver Curtis, son of mining executive Nick Curtis (founder of Linnaeus Earth), was convicted of insider trading in 2016 and served approximately one year in an Australian prison. His conviction centered on trades made using confidential information, a case that drew significant media attention in Australia.
After his release, Curtis pivoted to cryptocurrency mining, founding what would become Firmus Technologies. As the crypto market proved volatile, Curtis and co-founder Tim Rosenfield – along with Jonathan Levi, Curtis’s former brother-in-law – repositioned the company as an AI infrastructure provider. The pivot proved prescient: the explosion in demand for AI training compute that began in 2023 created a massive addressable market for GPU-dense data centers.
“This is a redemption story unlike anything I’ve seen in Australian tech,” said Anthony Macdonald, Chanticleer columnist at the Australian Financial Review. “Whether Firmus can live up to the hype is the billion-dollar question, but the market timing is undeniable.”
Curtis now serves as co-CEO alongside Rosenfield, and the $5.5 billion valuation has made his stake worth hundreds of millions of dollars. The company relocated its headquarters to Singapore while maintaining its core operations and data center builds in Australia.
The Launceston AI Factory: Australia’s First
Firmus is building what it describes as Australia’s first “AI factory” in Launceston, Tasmania. The facility is designed to house 36,000 Nvidia accelerator chips and will use Tasmania’s abundant hydroelectric power to run at significantly lower energy costs than comparable facilities in New South Wales or Victoria.
The Launceston site is part of what Firmus calls “Project Southgate,” a broader initiative to build multiple AI factories across Australia and the Asia-Pacific region. The company has already completed an R&D facility in Launceston and is retrofitting an existing data center in Melbourne to serve as an additional AI factory.
Firmus’s proprietary cooling technology is central to its competitive strategy. While most AI data centers rely on liquid cooling systems to manage the enormous heat output of modern GPUs, Firmus claims its approach achieves higher energy efficiency, translating to lower cost per AI token produced. The company has drawn comparisons to Australia’s iron ore boom, positioning AI compute as a digital commodity that can be exported globally.
“The economics of AI compute are fundamentally about energy costs and cooling efficiency,” said Dr. Sarah Chen, a data center analyst at IDC. “If Firmus can deliver on its cooling technology claims, the Tasmanian location gives them a genuine cost advantage that U.S.-based competitors would struggle to match.”
The $10 Billion Blackstone Debt Facility
Perhaps more significant than the equity round is the $10 billion (approximately AUD $14 billion) debt facility provided by Blackstone, the world’s largest alternative asset manager. Debt financing at this scale for a pre-IPO AI infrastructure company is virtually unprecedented outside the United States.
Blackstone has been aggressively expanding its data center investment portfolio, having spent more than $70 billion on data center assets globally since 2021. The firm’s willingness to extend a $10 billion credit line to Firmus reflects both the perceived stability of AI infrastructure revenue streams and the strategic importance of the Asia-Pacific market.
The debt facility will fund the construction of multiple AI factories across Australia and potentially other Asia-Pacific locations. Firmus has indicated that it plans to deploy more than $70 billion in total capital expenditure through 2028, a figure that would place it among the largest AI infrastructure buildouts globally.
| Company | Total Capital Raised | Valuation | Primary Market | Key Backer |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Firmus Technologies | $10.5B+ (equity + debt) | $5.5B | Asia-Pacific | Coatue, Nvidia, Blackstone |
| CoreWeave | ~$7.5B (pre-IPO equity) | $23B (IPO) | North America | Nvidia, Magnetar |
| Lambda | $1.5B+ | $4B | North America | SoftBank |
| Crusoe Energy | $850M+ | $3B | North America | Various |
| Nebius Group | $1.5B+ | $9.6B | Global | Nvidia, Accel |
The $2 Billion ASX IPO Plan
Firmus is preparing for a mid-2026 IPO on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX), targeting approximately $2 billion AUD (roughly $1.3 billion USD) in proceeds. If successful, it would be one of the largest tech IPOs in Australian history and the first pure-play AI infrastructure company to list in the Asia-Pacific region.
The IPO timeline places Firmus in a competitive window alongside several other major tech listings planned for 2026. Databricks has filed for what could be a $134 billion enterprise software IPO, while SpaceX has reportedly begun preparations for a listing that could value the company at $1.75 trillion. Even in this environment, Firmus’s listing would carry outsized significance for the Australian market.
“An AI infrastructure IPO on the ASX would be a watershed moment for Australian tech,” said Matthew Cranston, a technology reporter at the Australian Financial Review. “Australia has long been a mining and resources market. Firmus is essentially arguing that AI compute is the new iron ore – a commodity that can be produced cheaply here and exported to the world.”
The IPO will test investor appetite for AI infrastructure plays outside the United States, where CoreWeave’s post-IPO performance has been closely watched. CoreWeave shares have traded volatile since its March 2025 listing, reflecting broader uncertainty about the sustainability of AI infrastructure spending.
Asia-Pacific AI Data Center Market: The $800 Billion Opportunity
Firmus’s timing aligns with a massive expansion of AI data center investment across the Asia-Pacific region. According to Deloitte, approximately $800 billion in data center investment is expected across Asia-Pacific through the end of the decade, driven by AI workloads, cloud adoption, and digital sovereignty mandates from regional governments.
The Asia-Pacific AI-optimized data center market specifically is valued at $9.59 billion in 2025, growing at a 22.69% compound annual growth rate through 2030, according to Mordor Intelligence. APAC operators are projected to add more than 31.4 gigawatts of capacity between 2025 and 2030, with China leading at 18.2 GW, followed by Malaysia at 3 GW and India at 2.4 GW.
Major hyperscalers are already pouring billions into the region. OpenAI and NEXTDC are building an AUD $7 billion hyperscale AI campus in Sydney. Microsoft has committed $2.9 billion to hyperscaler expansion in Japan. Google has pledged $3 billion for data center buildouts in Singapore and Malaysia.
Singapore has approved 1.2 GW of new data center capacity, while Malaysia is expected to add more than 3 GW of installed power capacity by 2030. These investments reflect a broader recognition that AI workloads require geographically distributed infrastructure, and that Asia-Pacific offers advantages in energy costs, regulatory flexibility, and proximity to fast-growing markets.
How Firmus Compares to CoreWeave and Other AI Cloud Rivals
The most natural comparison for Firmus is CoreWeave, the GPU cloud provider that listed on the Nasdaq in March 2025. Both companies operate GPU-dense data centers designed primarily for AI workloads, and both have deep financial relationships with Nvidia.
CoreWeave raised approximately $7.5 billion in equity before going public and was valued at around $23 billion at its IPO. The company reported revenues exceeding $1.9 billion in 2024, with the vast majority coming from long-term contracts with AI companies and hyperscalers. However, CoreWeave’s aggressive capital spending – projected at $30 billion in capex – has drawn concerns about the sustainability of its debt-fueled growth model.
Firmus takes a different approach by focusing on the Asia-Pacific market, where competition is thinner and energy costs can be substantially lower. Tasmania’s hydroelectric power, for instance, provides baseload renewable energy at rates significantly below the grid prices in Northern Virginia or Texas, where most U.S. AI data centers are concentrated.
Other competitors in the AI infrastructure space include Lambda, which raised $1.5 billion and is valued at approximately $4 billion, and Nebius Group, the Nvidia-backed infrastructure company valued at $9.6 billion after its $1.5 billion raise. Crusoe Energy, which focuses on clean energy-powered data centers, has raised more than $850 million at a $3 billion valuation.
“The AI infrastructure market is large enough to support multiple winners across different geographies,” said James Wang, a semiconductor and AI infrastructure analyst at ARK Invest. “Firmus’s bet on Asia-Pacific addresses a genuine gap in the market – most AI compute is still concentrated in the U.S. and Western Europe.”
The Nvidia Partnership and Vera Rubin Chips
Nvidia’s participation in the Firmus funding round extends beyond financial investment. Firmus has committed to deploying Nvidia’s next-generation accelerator chips, including the Vera Rubin architecture, in its AI factories. The initial deployment at the Launceston facility will include 36,000 Nvidia accelerator chips, with plans to scale significantly as additional facilities come online.
Nvidia has pursued a strategy of investing in AI data center operators that commit to large-scale deployments of its hardware. The company has made similar investments in CoreWeave, Nebius Group, and Applied Digital, among others. For Nvidia, these investments help secure demand for its chips while building a network of infrastructure partners that can serve customers across different regions.
The Vera Rubin architecture, announced at Nvidia’s GTC 2026 conference in March, represents the company’s next major platform after Blackwell. Firmus’s commitment to deploying Vera Rubin chips positions it as an early adopter of the technology, which could give it a performance and efficiency advantage over competitors still running on older hardware.
Renewable Energy: Tasmania’s Hydroelectric Advantage
One of Firmus’s key differentiators is its emphasis on renewable energy. The Launceston AI factory in Tasmania will be powered primarily by hydroelectric energy, which provides consistent baseload power at costs well below fossil fuel alternatives. Tasmania generates roughly 90% of its electricity from renewable sources, primarily hydroelectric dams, making it an attractive location for energy-intensive AI workloads.
The energy cost advantage is significant. AI data centers are voracious consumers of electricity, with a single training run for a frontier AI model potentially requiring hundreds of millions of dollars in energy costs. According to MarketsandMarkets, the global AI data center market is valued at $344.24 billion in 2025 and is projected to reach $2.02 trillion by 2032, with energy costs representing a significant portion of total operating expenses.
Global hyperscaler capital expenditure for AI infrastructure exceeds $400 billion in 2026, according to industry estimates, with companies like Google, AWS, Microsoft, Oracle, and Meta all dramatically increasing their data center spending. Much of this spending is going toward securing reliable, cost-effective power – the single biggest operational challenge facing AI data center operators.
Firmus’s Tasmania-first strategy mirrors broader industry trends. In the United States, data center operators are increasingly turning to nuclear power, natural gas, and geothermal energy to meet their enormous electricity demands. Firmus argues that Tasmania’s existing hydroelectric infrastructure provides a ready-made solution without the regulatory and construction delays associated with building new power generation.
The Risks: Hype, Debt, and a Controversial Founder
For all its ambition, Firmus faces significant risks. The company’s $70 billion capex target through 2028 is enormous relative to its current revenue, which has not been publicly disclosed. The $10 billion Blackstone debt facility creates substantial financial obligations that must be serviced regardless of whether demand materializes as expected.
CoreWeave’s experience offers a cautionary tale. Despite strong revenue growth, CoreWeave’s stock has been volatile since its IPO, with investors questioning whether the company’s heavy debt load – projected at $30 billion in capex – is sustainable. Firmus’s debt-to-equity ratio could face similar scrutiny from ASX investors, who are generally more conservative than their Nasdaq counterparts when it comes to technology companies.
Oliver Curtis’s criminal conviction adds another layer of complexity. While Australian securities law does not automatically bar convicted individuals from serving as company directors after their sentence is served, Curtis’s history will inevitably draw scrutiny during the IPO roadshow. Institutional investors, particularly those with environmental, social, and governance (ESG) mandates, may be reluctant to back a company led by a convicted insider trader.
“The ESG question is real,” said Amelia McGuire, technology reporter at the Australian Financial Review. “Institutional investors will need to get comfortable with Curtis’s background, and that’s not a given, regardless of how strong the business case might be.”
There is also the question of whether the Asia-Pacific AI infrastructure market will grow as fast as Firmus is betting. While demand for AI compute is surging globally, much of that demand is concentrated among a relatively small number of hyperscalers and AI labs. If those companies decide to build their own facilities in the region – as OpenAI and Google are already doing – the addressable market for third-party infrastructure providers like Firmus could shrink.
Global AI Data Center Investment Comparison
| Region | Projected Investment (2025-2030) | Capacity Addition | Key Players | Growth Driver |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Asia-Pacific | $800B | 31.4 GW | Firmus, NEXTDC, Equinix | AI workloads, cloud migration |
| North America | $500B+ | 25+ GW | CoreWeave, Crusoe, QTS | Hyperscaler expansion |
| Europe | $200B+ | 10+ GW | Equinix, Digital Realty | Data sovereignty, AI |
| Middle East | $50B+ | 3+ GW | G42, Nebius, Oracle | Sovereign AI programs |
| Latin America | $30B+ | 2+ GW | Equinix, Scala | Cloud adoption |
What Firmus Means for Australia’s Tech Sector
Firmus’s rise has implications beyond the company itself. Australia has long struggled to produce globally significant technology companies, with its economy dominated by mining, banking, and real estate. Atlassian, the enterprise software company co-founded by Mike Cannon-Brookes and Scott Farquhar, remains the country’s most prominent tech success story, but it has been a rare exception.
A successful Firmus IPO could signal a shift in Australia’s economic identity, demonstrating that the country can compete in the AI infrastructure market by using the same advantages – cheap energy, vast land, stable governance – that have made it a global leader in commodities like iron ore and liquefied natural gas.
The Australian government has also signaled support for domestic AI infrastructure. In its 2025-2026 federal budget, the government allocated funding for digital infrastructure development, and several state governments have offered incentives for data center construction. Tasmania, in particular, has actively courted Firmus, recognizing the economic potential of hosting a major AI factory.
The question is whether Firmus can execute at the scale it is promising. Building and operating AI data centers is capital-intensive, technically complex, and requires deep relationships with both chip suppliers and end customers. The company’s pivot from crypto mining to AI infrastructure – while strategically sound – means it is still relatively early in its evolution as a data center operator.
Five Predictions for Firmus and the APAC AI Infrastructure Market
1. Firmus will complete its ASX IPO in Q3 2026, raising between $1.5 billion and $2 billion AUD. The company’s Nvidia backing and Blackstone debt facility provide credibility that should attract institutional investors despite the risks. Expect the IPO to be priced conservatively given Curtis’s background.
2. At least three more AI infrastructure companies will announce major Asia-Pacific expansions by the end of 2026. The region’s energy advantages and growing AI demand make it increasingly attractive. Lambda, Crusoe, and Nebius are all potential entrants.
3. Australia will emerge as the third-largest AI data center market in the Asia-Pacific by 2028. Behind China and Japan but ahead of Singapore and Malaysia, driven by Firmus, NEXTDC, and hyperscaler investments like the OpenAI Sydney campus.
4. The Asia-Pacific AI data center market will exceed $20 billion in annual revenue by 2028. Growing from $9.59 billion in 2025, the market’s 22.69% CAGR will be accelerated by sovereign AI initiatives and enterprise adoption.
5. Firmus’s proprietary cooling technology will attract acquisition interest from hyperscalers. If the technology delivers the efficiency gains Firmus claims, companies like Google and Microsoft could seek to license or acquire it rather than develop competing solutions.
The Broader AI Infrastructure Spending Race
Firmus’s $505 million raise is part of a much larger wave of AI infrastructure investment. Global hyperscaler capex exceeds $400 billion in 2026, with Microsoft, Google, Amazon, and Meta each spending tens of billions on data centers, chips, and networking equipment. The AI data center market itself is projected to grow from $344.24 billion in 2025 to $2.02 trillion by 2032, according to MarketsandMarkets.
This spending race has created enormous demand for GPU-dense data center capacity, which companies like Firmus, CoreWeave, and Lambda are racing to supply. The economics are straightforward: hyperscalers and AI labs need more compute than they can build themselves, creating a market for third-party infrastructure providers that can deliver capacity quickly.
However, the sustainability of this spending level is an open question. If AI model training costs decline – as some researchers predict due to algorithmic efficiency improvements – the demand for raw compute capacity could plateau. Companies that have taken on significant debt to build data centers, including both Firmus and CoreWeave, would be particularly vulnerable in such a scenario.
For now, though, the market shows no signs of slowing. Every major tech company is increasing its AI infrastructure spending, and the emergence of new AI applications – from autonomous vehicles to drug discovery to agentic AI systems – continues to drive demand for compute capacity.
Related Coverage
Related Coverage
- CoreWeave’s $30 Billion Capex Gamble: Inside the AI Cloud Company’s Debt-Fueled Rise
- Big Tech’s $700 Billion AI Infrastructure Bet: Inside the 2026 Spending Race
- NVIDIA GTC 2026: Rubin GPU Architecture Deep Dive and What It Means for the AI Chip Market
- The AI Data Center Power Crisis: How Big Tech’s 125 GW Appetite Is Reshaping the US Energy Grid
- Databricks’ $134 Billion IPO: Inside the $5.4B Revenue Machine
- AI Chips 2026: Guide to the GPU and Accelerator Market
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Firmus Technologies?
Firmus Technologies is an Australian AI infrastructure company that builds and operates GPU-dense data centers, which it calls “AI factories.” The company was co-founded by Oliver Curtis and Tim Rosenfield and is headquartered in Singapore with operations in Australia. Firmus raised $505 million in April 2026 at a $5.5 billion valuation, with backing from Coatue Management and Nvidia.
Who is Oliver Curtis, the Firmus co-founder?
Oliver Curtis is the co-CEO and co-founder of Firmus Technologies. He was convicted of insider trading in Australia in 2016 and served approximately one year in prison. After his release, he founded what became Firmus, initially as a cryptocurrency mining operation before pivoting to AI infrastructure. His background has drawn significant media attention as the company prepares for its ASX IPO.
When is the Firmus Technologies IPO?
Firmus is planning a mid-2026 IPO on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX), targeting approximately $2 billion AUD in proceeds. The listing would be one of the largest tech IPOs in Australian history and the first pure-play AI infrastructure company to list in the Asia-Pacific region.
What is Project Southgate?
Project Southgate is Firmus’s initiative to build multiple AI factories across Australia, starting with a facility in Launceston, Tasmania that will house 36,000 Nvidia accelerator chips. The project uses Tasmania’s hydroelectric power for low-cost renewable energy. Firmus is also retrofitting an existing data center in Melbourne as part of the broader Southgate expansion.
How does Firmus compare to CoreWeave?
Both companies operate GPU-dense data centers for AI workloads and have backing from Nvidia. CoreWeave, which went public in March 2025, is valued at approximately $23 billion and operates primarily in North America. Firmus, valued at $5.5 billion, focuses on the Asia-Pacific market and differentiates with proprietary cooling technology and access to low-cost renewable energy in Tasmania.
How big is the Asia-Pacific AI data center market?
The Asia-Pacific AI-optimized data center market is valued at $9.59 billion in 2025 and is growing at a 22.69% compound annual growth rate, according to Mordor Intelligence. Deloitte estimates approximately $800 billion in total data center investment across the Asia-Pacific region through the end of the decade, with APAC operators projected to add more than 31.4 GW of capacity between 2025 and 2030.
Sofia Lindström
Sofia Lindström is the Editor-in-Chief at Tech Insider, where she leads editorial strategy and oversees coverage across AI, cybersecurity, and enterprise technology. With over a decade in Swedish tech journalism, she previously served as technology editor at Dagens Industri and covered the Nordic startup ecosystem for Breakit. Sofia holds an MSc in Media Technology from KTH Royal Institute of Technology and is a frequent speaker at Web Summit and Slush. She is passionate about making complex technology accessible to business leaders.
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