Opening
Modal, a New York-based cloud infrastructure startup, has raised US$355 million in a Series C funding round led by General Catalyst and Redpoint at a US$4.65 billion post-money valuation, according to CEO Erik Bernhardsson. The company helps developers run AI and other compute-heavy applications. Menlo Ventures and Accel joined as new investors, while existing backers also participated. The funding milestone reflects growing demand for multi-cloud infrastructure that abstracts workloads across competing hyperscale providers.
Funding Details
General Catalyst and Redpoint co-led the Series C round. Menlo Ventures and Accel participated as new investors alongside existing backers. The US$4.65 billion post-money valuation marks a significant milestone for the infrastructure layer supporting AI deployment.
Company Growth and Revenue
Modal has grown fivefold since September and now exceeds US$300 million in annualized revenue, Bernhardsson stated. The company's sandbox product—which provides secure isolated environments for untrusted code execution—contributes approximately one-third of total revenue.
Technical Architecture
Modal's infrastructure stack includes several custom components:
- Core stack: Written in Rust, designed for speed and reliability.
- Container runtime: Features a custom filesystem enabling near-instant container starts, plus a runtime using memory snapshots to reduce cold starts for large AI models to under three seconds.
- Resource solver: An internal tool using linear programming to move GPU capacity across Amazon Web Services (AWS), Google Cloud Platform (GCP), and Oracle in real time based on price and availability.
- Sandbox product: Delivers secure isolated environments for customers such as Quora's Poe, Quora's AI chatbot platform.
Market Implications
Modal's multi-cloud approach creates a new software layer that can treat hyperscale cloud providers as interchangeable suppliers for certain workloads. By routing workloads across clouds and regions, Modal retains value that might otherwise accrue to AWS, Google, or Oracle through compute usage and related services. Across the industry, this model could intensify price competition among hyperscale cloud providers on compute and encourage multi-cloud cost control as a standard business practice.