
Photo Credit: Mackenzie Marco
Time will tell, though overall, a good bit of evidence suggests that the industry funding spike isn’t through yet. In the first place, thanks to DMN Pro’s Music Industry Funding Tracker, we know that May’s volume slowdown isn’t unprecedented.
To be sure, May 2025 delivered just three rounds, the largest having come from Intercept Music, totaling $57.3 million. As such, the aforementioned $80 million Series B from South Korea’s The Black Label actually represents an almost 40% year-over-year increase.
Furthermore, it’s also worth reiterating that April 2026 alone brought raises totaling close to $3 billion, including a $2.2 billion haul for Primary Wave. May (and June) results aside, Q2’s already made a funding splash.
For instance, reports recently pointed to a forthcoming Series D, secured at a $5 billion valuation, for Suno. The company has yet to formally disclose the raise, but as its November 2025 Series C clocked in at $250 million, the newer round would have contributed to a noticeably different funding picture if confirmed during May.
(Suno’s presumably imminent Series D aligns with a wider trend of June funding resurgences as well. Last year, Rezonate, HarbourView, and Fever pulled down three-quarters of a billion dollars between them during the month.)
That remains to be seen: Bubble or not, AI funding is seemingly set to continue rolling in for the foreseeable future. And while logic suggests it’s about time for IP acquisition raises to decelerate – how many billions, including ample undeployed capital, have poured into the deal-heavy sub-sector since 2020? – they have yet to do so.
When a cooldown does materialize, one possibility is that cash could once again reach a substantial number of startups. It probably won’t come as a shock in light of the above-described funding realities, but Seed and Series A capital for emerging businesses has been in comparatively short supply as of late.
Sphere Abu Dhabi announced a $1.7 billion investment; Shamrock Capital obtained $813 million for a “Content Strategy Fund” that will invest in various entertainment assets; and an IPO-minded Anthropic scored a staggering $65 billion at a nearly $1 trillion valuation.