SAP bets $1.16B on 18-month-old German AI lab and says yes to NemoClaw
SAP plans to buy German AI startup Prior Labs and invest heavily in it. It is also prohibiting customers' agents use to a select few like Nvidia's NemoClaw.
By OpenAI COO’s own admission last February, “we have not yet really seen AI penetrate enterprise business processes.” But for enterprise software giant SAP, whose stock has dropped significantly in 2026 in part from the “SaaSpocalypse,” the issue is still front and center.
On Monday, the European heavyweight announced its intention to acquire German AI startup Prior Labs for an undisclosed amount. Pending regulatory approval, SAP plans to invest €1 billion (approximately $1.16 billion) into the business over the next four years to grow it into an AI lab focused on structured data — the tables and databases where enterprise information typically sits.
SAP declined to disclose how much it spent on the acquisition itself, but sources told Pathfounders that this was a healthy exit: an “almost all cash” deal, with well over half a billion dollars in cash up front for the startup’s founders — Frank Hutter, Noah Hollmann, and Sauraj Gambhir.
The trio co-founded Prior Labs just 18 months ago with a focus on tabular foundation models (TFMs) — AI models that can make predictions from data that sits in tables and databases. This is potentially a better fit for enterprises than language models. It is certainly a better fit for SAP, whose widely used software products for accounting, HR, procurement and expense management rely on its database.
However, Germany’s most valuable company also seems be playing defense as the tech industry marches toward agentic AI. While it works to create its own AI lab, the company has blocked OpenClaw and any other agent tech that it has not explicitly authorized, The Information was first to spot.
In response to a request for comment, SAP’s press department referred TechCrunch to the company’s latest API policy , which does say that SAP “prohibits” AI agents from accessing its products through its API except for those that are “SAP-endorsed architectures.”
Authorized architectures of course include SAP’s own offering, Joule Agents , still in beta, which lets customers create their own agents. Nvidia also announced in March that SAP’s Joule supports Nvidia’s Agent Toolkit , which is software for managing agents. This toolkit is the foundation for Nvidia’s enterprise-ready, security-focused OpenClaw competitor, NemoClaw. Hence SAP customers will be authorized to use NemoClaw agents.
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For a giant incumbent player like SAP, AI is both a threat and an opportunity. “It’s all about how quickly [we can] as SAP actually also embark [on] these technologies in our R&D portfolio to keep the relative economies of scale advantage,” CFO Dominik Asam told CNBC in January.
SAP hasn’t been sitting on its hands. The German company invested in generative AI companies that develop language models large and small: In 2023, it backed OpenAI rival Anthropic — as well as Aleph Alpha and Cohere, which now intend to merge to form “a global AI powerhouse.”
It had also developed SAP-RPT-1 , a relational pretrained transformer model. “Early on, SAP recognized that the greatest untapped opportunity in enterprise AI wasn’t large language models; it was AI built for the structured data that runs the world’s businesses,” SAP CTO Philipp Herzig declared in a statement.
But Prior Labs’ acquisition is a significant shortcut in that direction. Its TabPFN model series has experienced a lot of traction among developers. In a blog post on the deal, the startup’s founders said that its open source models have been downloaded over three million times.
In a press release, SAP promised that Prior Labs will maintain the open source versions: “The lab will operate as an independent unit to ensure research velocity while SAP provides long-term investment and a direct path to productization across the SAP portfolio with SAP AI Core and SAP Business Data Cloud as well as the agentic layer with Joule.”
SAP and the startup headquartered in Freiburg, Germany, hope that this investment will lead to TFMs that can grab data in the tables where it lives, combine that with language, reasoning, and domain knowledge.
More than that, they hope that Prior Labs, with this “massive boost” from SAP, can become a new “globally-leading frontier AI lab for structured data — in Europe, in the open,” founder and CEO Frank Hutter celebrated in a post on X .
In February 2025, the startup had previously raised some $9.3 million in a pre-seed funding round led by Balderton Capital — more than competitor Neuralk-AI , but a lot less than Fundamental , which emerged out of stealth with a $255 million Series A in February.
In a post on X , Balderton partner James Wise called Prior Labs’ acquisition “one of Germany’s biggest ever venture outcomes.” As for SAP, its stock is currently trading slightly upwards.
Meanwhile, SAP is being very strict as to the agents it will allow into its ecosystem. This is a wildly different approach than Salesforce, another incumbent caught in the SaaSpocalypse . It is allowing enterprise to choose their own agents, including OpenClaw if they so wish, with its new Headless 360 architecture .
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Key takeaways
- The acquisition of Prior Labs could boost AI adoption in Brazilian companies, focusing on structured data models.
- The restriction on the use of unauthorized agent technologies highlights the importance of security and compliance in AI implementation.
- SAP's significant investment in AI may open opportunities for Brazilian startups in the sector.
Editorial analysis
SAP's acquisition of Prior Labs represents a significant strategic move for the software giant, especially at a time when AI adoption in enterprises is still in its early stages. For the Brazilian tech sector, this news highlights the importance of structured data models, which are fundamental for the operation of many businesses. SAP, with its strong presence in Brazil, could influence the development of AI solutions that meet local needs, particularly in sectors like finance and human resources, where data efficiency is crucial.
Moreover, SAP's decision to restrict the use of unauthorized agent technologies, such as OpenClaw, underscores the need for control and security in AI implementation. This could serve as a warning for Brazilian companies exploring AI, indicating that the choice of partners and tools should be made cautiously, prioritizing solutions that ensure data integrity and regulatory compliance.
The €1 billion investment in Prior Labs also suggests a growing trend of consolidation in the AI market, where established companies seek to acquire innovative startups to accelerate their technological development. This could open opportunities for Brazilian startups seeking partnerships or acquisitions, especially those working with structured data or AI models tailored to the local context.
Finally, SAP's collaboration with Nvidia to integrate NemoClaw into its solutions may indicate a pathway toward creating a more robust AI ecosystem in Brazil. As more companies adopt AI solutions, the demand for tools that can manage and optimize data usage will become increasingly relevant, creating space for innovations that meet these specific needs.
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