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Michigan Post > Blog > Startups > AI AI traders: Information centres and synthetic intelligence startups fireplace up Australian VC backing
Startups

AI AI traders: Information centres and synthetic intelligence startups fireplace up Australian VC backing

By Editorial Board Published October 14, 2025 7 Min Read
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AI AI traders: Information centres and synthetic intelligence startups fireplace up Australian VC backing

Startup funding topped $1 billion within the third quarter of 2025, with traders desirous to again information centres and AI with enthusiasm that remembers the mid-pandemic valuation bubble of 2021-2022

Buyers threw cash at AI startups like followers tossing underwear on stage at a Tom Jones live performance in Q3, in response to the most recent Reduce By way of Enterprise September quarter report.

A 3rd of the funding complete got here from six-year-old, Singapore-based information centre infrastructure enterprise, Firmus Applied sciences, which raised $330 million in a spherical backed by US chip large Nvidia in mid-September. The corporate is constructing a knowledge centre in Tasmania.

Nonetheless, {hardware} and biotech startups led complete funding for the primary time, supported by sustained curiosity in local weather tech. It appears broader political sentiment round deep tech and manufacturing is now beginning to circulation by means of to investor mindset, maybe pushed by the big investments the Nationwide Reconstruction Fund can also be making alongside VC.

All up, there have been 116 rounds within the quarter, with greater than 1 / 4 (31) from accelerators investments. Firmus was the one increase to hit 9 figures, with the opposite high 5 raises by IoT chip maker Morse Micro ($88m Collection C), adopted by scorching AI startup Lorikeet ($54m Collection A), vaccination biotech Vaxxas ($49m Collection D) and eCommerce fulfilment startup Skutopia’s $38 million, which was notable because the increase was eschewed by VC corporations.

The Australian Enterprise Capital Funding quarterly report didn’t embrace Blackbird-backed PsiQuantum’s $1.5bn Collection E. Whereas the startup has expat Australian founders, and is constructing a quantum pc in Brisbane, it’s based mostly and registered within the US.

Valuations moved increased throughout the board in Q3, with probably the most pronounced elevate at pre-seed, Seed, and Collection A. Later levels have been steadier, and AI-first firms priced at a premium, elevating quicker and infrequently at costs paying homage to 2021.

Most traders anticipate to do extra offers than in 2024, and in the event that they tip greater than $1.3 billion into startups within the December quarter, 2025 will rank third behind 2021 and 2022 for probably the most capital deployed yearly in Australia.

The CTV report notes that after a mushy Q2, female-only-led startups rebounded with their strongest displaying since early 2023, although the general share of capital to feminine and blended groups fell to 11%, the bottom funding in six quarters. Accelerator packages have been liable for many of the backing for feminine founders.

Enterprise funding and offers 2019-2025. Supply: Reduce By way of Enterprise

Bottlenecks and bubbles

Report creator and CTV founder Chris Gillings famous {that a} Collection B bottleneck persists and inflated valuations throughout 2021–22 could also be accountable.

“Cheap capital and an influx of new funds led to unusually large rounds at extraordinary valuations. Founders who might previously have raised $8 million at a $40 million post-money valuation were suddenly raising $25 million at $150 million,” he wrote.

“Buyers justified the pricing based mostly on development assumptions that relied available on the market remaining open indefinitely. The issue is that valuations are guarantees concerning the future. When the market reset in late 2022, many firms couldn’t develop quick sufficient to fulfill these guarantees. That overhang has outlined the years since.

“Startups with inflated A-round valuations discovered themselves boxed in: too costly to boost an up-round, too early for an exit, and rising too sluggish to fulfill the brand new effectivity benchmarks anticipated by traders.

Some responded by tightening burn and pushing for profitability. Others turned to quiet insider extensions, down rounds, or just waited for situations to enhance. The result’s the plateau… These firms haven’t failed, however they aren’t advancing on the fee that their Collection A traders most likely thought they’d.”

Gillings says that by late 2023, a lot of these firms had accepted the brand new actuality and the market recalibrated quite than collapsed, whereas founders did extra with much less, and funds narrowed their focus.

He says the 2024 cohort is presently monitoring forward of current years.

That may be a constructive signal. It suggests a more healthy pipeline constructed on extra reasonable valuations, cleaner metrics, and stronger cohort high quality. Buyers are backing firms which have gone on to have earned their A, not simply pitched it nicely,” he argues.

Gillings mentioned investor self-discipline goes to water when the AI carrot is dangled.

“Some of the largest AI rounds over the past year have been done quietly at valuations reminiscent of 2021,” he mentioned

“The tone is acquainted: the expertise is totally different, however the psychology is identical. It’s too early to name this a bubble. The distinction this time is that the exuberance is concentrated, not widespread. But it surely’s price remembering that bubbles don’t seem like bubbles after they begin.

“Whether this next phase becomes a disciplined expansion or a repeat of past mistakes depends on how investors and founders handle their euphoria this time.”

You may learn the The Australian Enterprise Capital Funding Q3 2025 report right here.

CTV investor insight q3 25

Investor insights from the CTV Q3 ’25 report. Supply: Reduce By way of Enterprise

TAGGED:ArtificialAustralianbackingcentresdatafireintelligenceinvestorsStartups
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