Indian data centre firm Yotta aims to raise up to $1.2b ahead of IPO

Indian data centre firm Yotta aims to raise up to $1.2b ahead of IPO

FILE PHOTO: Sunil Gupta, Co-founder, Managing Partner & CEO of Yotta Infrastructure Solutions, looks on during the Nasscom Technology and Leadership Forum 2025 in Mumbai, India, February 25, 2025. REUTERS/Francis Mascarenhas/File Photo

India’s Yotta Data Services will spend over $2 billion on Nvidia’s latest chips to set up an artificial intelligence computing hub as it prepares to float its shares, it said on Wednesday, delivering a boost to the country’s fledgling AI drive.

Yotta is aiming to raise up to $1.2 billion from investors to fund its expansion ahead of an initial public offering, potentially due to happen as soon as this year, CEO Sunil Gupta told Reuters on the sidelines of the India AI Impact Summit in New Delhi.

He would not provide further details of the capital-raising plans.

India’s AI drive intensifies

India, trailing the US and China in developing AI technology, has positioned itself as a major destination for global datacenter companies with a large population and developer community that could help turn these investments profitable.

That has helped draw nearly $70 billion in investments from the likes of Microsoft and Alphabet.

The investment also comes amid tighter US export controls that have reshaped global supply chains for advanced AI chips, prompting companies to deepen partnerships in markets such as India.

The more than 20,000 Nvidia Blackwell Ultra chips are expected to be deployed by August. The US company would use half of the chips itself over four years for its DGX AI cloud service that is employed by Indian IT giants such as Tata Consultancy Services or Infosys.

Yotta, which has been backed by Indian billionaire Niranjan Hiranandani’s real estate group, is a partner firm for Nvidia in India and runs three datacenter campuses in Mumbai, Gujarat and near New Delhi.

Its new AI supercluster will be deployed in New Delhi, with additional capacity from its facility in India’s financial capital Mumbai.

A source with knowledge of the discussions told Reuters Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund Mubadala was in talks to invest in the Indian company in the pre-IPO phase.

Yotta declined to comment on potential investors, while Mubadala did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Reuters

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