DeepSeek's Liang Wenfeng Becomes World's Richest AI Founder

DeepSeek’s Liang Wenfeng Becomes World’s Richest AI Founder 

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DeepSeek's Liang Wenfeng Becomes World's Richest AI Founder
  • DeepSeek’s valuation jumped from around $10 billion to nearly $50 billion.
  • Liang personally invested around $3 billion, or roughly 40% of the raise.
  • He still owns about 78% of DeepSeek even after the first outside funding round.

DeepSeek founder Liang Wenfeng added roughly $19 billion to his net worth in a single day after a July 13 valuation reappraisal boosted the company’s value, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.

Liang Wenfeng, who built DeepSeek out of the AI division of his quantitative hedge fund, High-Flyer, has overtaken Anthropic’s Dario Amodei and OpenAI’s Greg Brockman to become the wealthiest founder among companies whose primary business is AI models. His net worth now stands at approximately $36 billion, up from $16.7 billion.

What Changed And Why

  • DeepSeek closed a $7.4 billion funding round in June 2026, its first-ever external raise
  • Valuation jumped from approximately $10 billion in April to around $50 billion
  • Liang personally put in approximately $3 billion, roughly 40% of the total raise
  • His stake was diluted to approximately 78%
  • The round was reportedly oversubscribed, with Beijing’s state-backed funds among participants

Man Behind The Number

Liang was born in 1985 in Zhanjiang, Guangdong, the son of an elementary school teacher. He studied electronic engineering at Zhejiang University before earning a master’s in information and communication engineering from the same institution. 

His team started buying Nvidia graphics processing units in 2019, before most people outside the semiconductor industry were paying attention. Those chips became the computing foundation that let DeepSeek build competitive AI models without venture capital backing. DeepSeek itself was spun out of High-Flyer’s AI division in July 2023.

In January 2025, DeepSeek’s R1 model erased roughly $1 trillion from American technology stocks in a single session, turning Liang from an obscure quant into a figure that Silicon Valley could no longer ignore.

Why The Ownership Structure Matters

Most frontier AI companies in the United States gave away large chunks of equity to venture capital firms and technology giants to get to scale. Liang did the opposite; he funded DeepSeek internally, took no outside money until this year, and still controls nearly four-fifths of the company.

Amodei and Brockman hold minority positions in companies with vast external investor bases and complex governance. Liang’s $36 billion puts him at eighth among China’s wealthiest individuals, just behind Cambricon Technologies co-founder Chen Tianshi. 

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