VAST Data has closed a $500M Series F funding round, led by Drive Capital with Access Industries as co-lead. Existing investors Fidelity, NEA, and NVIDIA all participated. The round brings the company’s reported total equity funding to $881M since its 2016 founding by Renen Hallak, Jeff Denworth, Shachar Fienblit, and Alon Horev.
No valuation figure was disclosed. This is a private company announcement confirmed through secondary aggregator reporting. No SEC Form D filing is available.
The number that matters most here isn’t $500M. It’s NVIDIA.
Strategic investment participation from a chip manufacturer in an AI storage platform isn’t routine portfolio behavior. NVIDIA’s business model is built on selling compute. When NVIDIA invests in a company positioned as an “AI operating system” that integrates data management, real-time processing, and compute orchestration, it’s worth asking what NVIDIA gets from that relationship beyond a financial return.
The answer likely involves distribution. VAST Data’s platform targets enterprises building AI infrastructure at scale, exactly the buyers already investing heavily in NVIDIA hardware. A tighter integration between VAST’s data layer and NVIDIA’s compute stack creates stickiness for both. Enterprises that standardize on VAST don’t choose storage in a vacuum. They’re building a full pipeline, and NVIDIA wants to be embedded in every layer of it.
Drive Capital leading the round adds another dimension. The firm focuses on companies outside the traditional coastal tech hubs, and VAST fits a pattern of infrastructure companies that often get underestimated because they’re not building the flashy model, they’re building what the model runs on.
This round continues a clear pattern in AI capital allocation over the past 30 days. It follows EQT’s infrastructure strategy and Cursor’s reported funding talks, both of which signal that AI-adjacent infrastructure, the plumbing, not the application, is absorbing significant institutional capital. The thesis is consistent: whoever controls the data layer controls the economics of AI at enterprise scale.
For enterprise buyers evaluating AI infrastructure, VAST Data’s capitalization matters beyond the headline number. A company with $881M in reported equity has the runway to build out enterprise support, regulatory compliance capabilities, and long-term product roadmaps that underfunded competitors can’t match. That’s relevant for procurement decisions, not just investment theses.
What to watch: whether NVIDIA’s participation deepens into a formal technology partnership or integration announcement, and whether Drive Capital’s lead indicates a geographic expansion strategy beyond current markets. The competitive response from established storage players, particularly those who’ve been slower to orient around AI workloads, will also be worth tracking in the next two quarters.
The TJS read: VAST Data’s Series F is less a bet on one company and more a market signal about where the AI infrastructure buildout is headed. Compute consolidation is already well-documented. Now capital is moving to the data layer beneath it. NVIDIA investing in that layer, rather than just selling into it, is the most telling data point in this round.