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Hugging Face closed a $400 million Series E round last month that values the platform at $6.8 billion and directs fresh capital toward tools that let companies train and host models on their own infrastructure.
The move comes as rental fees for large language model access have climbed sharply since January, pushing finance teams to recalculate total spend against one-time hardware purchases and internal engineering hires.
Local programmes tap the same capital wave
Teams working out of the Stone & Chalk hub on Kent Street have secured follow-on cheques from local superannuation funds to build private instances of open models instead of renewing API contracts. At the same time, researchers at the Data61 facility in Eveleigh are running pilot programmes that combine Hugging Face libraries with on-premise GPU clusters funded through the federal R&D tax incentive.
Both sites report that project budgets now allocate 35 percent of spend to capital equipment rather than the 70 percent previously earmarked for monthly usage invoices.
Industry trackers recorded $2.1 billion in Australian venture deployments into AI infrastructure companies during the first half of 2026, up from $920 million in the same period a year earlier, according to filings with the Australian Securities and Investments Commission.
Next steps for finance and engineering leads
Companies weighing the switch should first audit six months of token consumption logs to identify high-volume workloads that justify dedicated hardware. Procurement teams can then model payback periods using current GPU server pricing, which sits at roughly $28,000 per A100-equivalent unit under three-year leases. Those calculations, completed before the next budget cycle, will determine whether internal ownership delivers measurable savings by early 2027.
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