Nvidia has snapped up Kumo AI, a four-year-old Mountain View startup, for more than $400 million, according to a report from The Information. The deal was quietly confirmed when an Nvidia executive posted about it on LinkedIn.
Kumo’s three co-founders — Vanja Josifovski, Jure Leskovec, and Hema Raghavan — have already made the move to Nvidia. Their LinkedIn profiles now list them as Nvidia employees, though the Kumo website hasn’t been updated to reflect the acquisition.
NVDA stock dipped 1% on Thursday following the news.
Kumo was founded in 2022 by researchers connected to Stanford University. The startup had raised $37 million in venture capital from investors including Sequoia Capital before the acquisition.
Kumo builds AI models designed to answer predictive business questions using structured enterprise data — things like customer records and payment histories. That’s territory where traditional large language models tend to struggle.
The startup combined synthetic data techniques with graph machine-learning technology to solve that problem. Its models can tackle predictions around customer churn, credit default risk, and similar business challenges without needing additional training each time.
“With the foundation model, you point it to your data, you define what you mean by churn, and a second later, you get the prediction,” co-founder Jure Leskovec said previously.
Kumo’s most recent model, KumoRFM-2, launched in April 2026. Customers and partners have included DoorDash, Reddit, Databricks, and Snowflake.
This deal is part of a broader pattern. Nvidia has acquired more than 100 startups over the past few years as it builds out its full-stack AI ecosystem.
Recent deals include a $20 billion acqui-hire of key assets and personnel from AI inference company Groq in December 2025, the acquisition of data semantics company Illumex in February 2026, and a $700 million deal for orchestration software company Run.ai in April 2024.
How Nvidia will deploy Kumo’s technology isn’t entirely clear yet. The company may integrate Kumo’s models into its AI foundry software, or use Kumo’s researchers to develop new enterprise foundation models, The Information reported.
The acquisition expands Nvidia’s portfolio of AI models optimized for its hardware and gives companies more tools to build and customize models on top of its platform.
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