The base facts on Anthropic’s Series H are settled. Anthropic’s official announcement confirms $65 billion raised, a $965 billion post-money valuation, and a lead investor group of Altimeter Capital, Dragoneer Investment Group, Greenoaks Capital, and Sequoia Capital. The round also includes $15 billion of previously committed investments from hyperscalers, among them $5 billion from Amazon. That’s been reported. What wasn’t fully resolved until June 1 is who else is on the cap table, and why it matters.
Samsung Electronics, SK Hynix, and Micron Technology are reported to have joined the round as strategic infrastructure partners, according to multiple independent industry reports. Their participation isn’t incidental. These are the three dominant suppliers of high-bandwidth memory, the component that sits between GPU and computation, and the one that’s increasingly where AI infrastructure value concentrates. Until now, the story was that chipmakers supply Anthropic. The June 1 filings and press confirmations change the framing: chipmakers are also backing Anthropic.
Samsung’s investment amount hasn’t been disclosed. Korean press reports have described it as reaching several trillion won, though this figure couldn’t be independently confirmed and shouldn’t be treated as verified. What Korean industry outlet Korea Economic Daily Global (kedglobal.com) does report is the strategic motivation: Samsung is eyeing a foundry deal, contract chip manufacturing, with Anthropic as part of the investment relationship. SK Hynix’s participation is reported to be aimed at reinforcing its position in AI memory supply, per the same Korean industry reporting.
Analysis
Samsung's reported foundry deal motivation means the investment relationship and the procurement relationship are now linked. That's a standard feature of strategic investment in semiconductors, but it's a new structural element in frontier AI lab capitalization that enterprise customers should factor into their supply chain assessments.
This is the third major infrastructure-aligned investment in Anthropic’s cap table following Amazon’s $5 billion commitment and Google’s participation. The pattern, hyperscalers plus chipmakers as equity holders alongside pure financial investors, is distinct from how the prior AI funding cycle worked. A18Z, Sequoia, and Tiger Global wrote checks. Now the companies that build the physical stack are writing them too.
The catch is that equity participation by suppliers creates a new category of supply chain complexity. When Samsung holds equity in Anthropic and is also bidding on Anthropic’s foundry contracts, the procurement relationship isn’t at arm’s length. That’s not inherently problematic, strategic investment is common in semiconductor supply chains, but it’s a dependency structure that investors in both companies, and Anthropic’s enterprise customers, should understand clearly.
Don’t bet on this being isolated to Anthropic. The May 30 supply chain brief documented compute agreements across Anthropic’s hyperscaler relationships. The equity layer announced June 1 adds a capital dimension to those infrastructure ties. If this pattern holds across the frontier lab cohort, the next round at any major lab should be read as much for who’s on the strategic partner list as for the headline valuation.
What to Watch
What to watch
Samsung’s foundry deal, if it materializes, will be the first test of whether equity participation translates into contract capture. Watch for any Anthropic semiconductor procurement announcement in Q3 2026. That’s the data point that confirms or challenges the thesis that chipmaker equity is about securing supply relationships, not just financial returns.
The real story here isn’t the valuation. It’s that the companies making the chips are now also making the bet, and that changes the supply chain calculus for every enterprise customer building on Anthropic’s infrastructure.