Nvidia has acquired Kumo AI, a four-year-old startup that builds foundation models for making predictions from business data, Fortune reported on June 3. The Information pegged the deal at more than $400 million. Kumo’s three co-founders, CEO Vanja Josifovski, engineering head Hema Raghavan and Stanford professor Jure Leskovec, moved to Nvidia in May, though neither company has formally announced the transaction.

The price is modest for a company that struck a $20 billion agreement for Groq in December 2025, but the technology Kumo built addresses a gap that generative AI has left open. Large language models transformed how enterprises work with documents, images and code, while the customer records, transactions and product catalogs sitting in relational databases have largely missed the wave. Kumo built what it calls the industry’s first foundation model aimed squarely at that data.

Foundation Models For Business Data

At its core, KumoRFM is a pre-trained relational graph transformer. It represents a database as a graph, where every record becomes a node and the primary-foreign key links between tables become edges. Because the model was pre-trained on thousands of real and synthetic relational datasets, it can make predictions on a database it has never seen, without task-specific training. Users define the prediction, such as which customers will churn in the next 30 days, through a lightweight query language.

Customers can run churn prediction, fraud detection, recommendations and demand forecasting directly against their data warehouse, skipping the months of feature engineering that conventional machine learning pipelines demand. On the RelBench benchmark, which spans 30 predictive tasks across seven domains, Kumo reports that the zero-shot model outperforms gradient-boosted trees built with hand-crafted features, and that fine-tuning lifts results by a further 10% to 30%. The startup, backed by $37 million from investors including Sequoia Capital, shipped a second-generation model in April and counts DoorDash, Reddit and Snowflake among its users.

Another Layer Of The Stack

The acquisition follows a familiar pattern. Nvidia bought Run:ai for roughly $700 million to own GPU orchestration, picked up the data semantics startup Illumex and signed the Groq agreement for low-latency inference. Each deal moves Nvidia further from selling chips and closer to owning the software enterprises run on those chips. Kumo extends that motion into predictive analytics, a market served today by gradient-boosted tooling, AutoML vendors and the machine learning services of AWS, Google Cloud and Microsoft.

The deal also creates an awkward dynamic for Snowflake and Databricks, which position their platforms as the natural home for machine learning on enterprise data and now find a prominent predictive AI vendor inside the company they depend on for accelerated computing.

The Challenges Ahead

The evidence for KumoRFM’s accuracy comes almost entirely from Kumo’s own paper and benchmarks, and independent validation remains thin. Relational foundation models are a young category, and zero-shot results still trail fine-tuned models on demanding tasks. The absence of an official announcement leaves the integration roadmap unclear, and Nvidia declined to comment to Fortune, so whether KumoRFM becomes part of Nvidia AI Enterprise, ships as a microservice or stays standalone remains an open question. Retention is another risk, since deals of this size often hinge on the founding team, and no public commitments bind the three founders to stay.

What This Deal Means To Decision Makers

For technology leaders, the promise is a shorter path from warehouse to prediction. A model that answers churn and fraud questions in seconds, without a dedicated data science pipeline, changes the cost calculation for predictive projects. The practical questions follow from there. How will a relational foundation model price against the churn and fraud models already in production, where does the data go when the model runs, and what happens to existing Kumo contracts under Nvidia’s ownership?

If Nvidia folds KumoRFM into its enterprise software stack, predictive AI on structured data becomes a capability that arrives bundled with the GPUs enterprises already buy. The acquisition is a calculated bet that the data warehouse holds the next wave of enterprise AI value, and at this price Nvidia can afford to be early.

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