Swedish “vibe coding” start-up Lovable is fielding inbound investment offers valuing the company at more than $4bn, more than double the price at which it raised funding just weeks ago.
The artificial intelligence start-up, which promises to make programming an app as easy as writing a few sentences, has seen a flurry of inbound interest from investors after announcing a $200mn funding round last month, according to people familiar with the matter.
Lovable was valued at $1.8bn in a deal led by venture capital group Accel in mid-July, cementing its position as one of Europe’s hottest AI companies. That round came on the heels of a $15mn investment led by Creandum in February.
People with knowledge of the new investment approaches said Lovable chief executive Anton Osika was not currently engaging with investors on the latest proposals, but that he was weighing fundraising options for the coming months.
A Lovable spokesperson said the company “is not fundraising now” but did not comment further on the proposed deals.
The new offers coming so soon after Lovable’s last funding round signals an investor frenzy over “vibe coding” start-ups. Anysphere, the US-based maker of the Cursor coding assistant, more than tripled its valuation to $9bn during the first half of this year after raising $900mn in May.
Lovable was founded in Stockholm just two years ago and launched its AI coding product late last year. Its angel investors include Nik Storonsky and Sebastian Siemiatkowski, the chiefs of European fintech groups Revolut and Klarna, respectively, as well as Stewart Butterfield, co-founder of workplace messaging app Slack.
“Building in Europe has been a competitive advantage,” Osika said last month when its latest round was announced. “We’ve achieved this growth with just 45 people by focusing relentlessly on product quality, speed and user experience rather than overhead.”
Its revenue growth has skyrocketed in recent months. In July, the company said its annual recurring revenues had surpassed $100mn just eight months after crossing the $1mn threshold, and that more than 10mn projects had been built on the platform.
Lovable’s programming tool draws on the output of various AI models, including from OpenAI, Anthropic and Google. The company then adapts the code to create whatever kind of app the user wants to build.
However, it is yet to demonstrate it can generate a consistent profit amid questions from some investors about whether AI coding tools can make a margin in a highly competitive market while paying fees to AI model providers each time they are used.
AI coding tools are becoming so popular that they are starting to displace entry-level programming jobs. But critics say they can introduce security risks or other errors that novice programmers would not catch before releasing their app.
Lovable is one of a new crop of European AI start-ups mainly working on applications and services aimed at businesses.
French AI start-up Mistral is in talks to raise new funding at a $10bn valuation, the Financial Times previously reported. Lovable’s enterprise customers include Klarna, HubSpot and Photoroom.
Investors including 20VC, byFounders, Hummingbird and Visionaries Club have also previously backed the company.
Additional reporting by Melissa Heikkilä