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The elbow of compounding growth creates a minor separation to start, but a yawning gap within a handful of years.
Why does this reinforcing effect exist? Companies with greater presence in the market will build brand, hire more sales teams, pitch more prospects, close more customers. More revenue growth translates into more dollars raised. Note, I haven’t factored in the valuation multiple premia afforded to top quartile growth.
The right strategy depends on the startup’s position in the market & the relative strength or weakness of competition. There’s no single answer, but it’s important to consider the effect of compounding growth in determining a strategy.
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Hebbia and Andreessen Horowitz didn’t respond to a request for comment.
Hebbia was founded in 2020 by George Sivulka, who launched the company while working on his PhD in electrical engineering at Stanford. Sivulka was inspired by his friends working in the financial industry who told Sivulka that part of their long work weeks was spent searching for information in SEC filings and other dense documents. Sivulka thought that AI could help them save hours at the office and give them more time for rest and sleep.
Hebbia’s AI can look over billions of documents at once, including PDFs, PowerPoints, spreadsheets and transcripts and return specific answers, the company says.
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A filing with the SEC shows that the AI Fund’s second fund, AI Venture Fund II, has so far amassed $69.75 million from 13 partners — leaving around $50 million to be invested. The AI Fund’s PR declined to comment.
Ng, the founder of the Google Brain deep learning project, co-founder of Coursera, and recent Amazon board appointee, was one of the most recognizable names in the AI community when he became Baidu’s chief scientist in 2014. He left Baidu in 2017 to jumpstart a number of AI ventures, including the DeepLearning.ai course and Landing AI, a startup developing AI tools targeting manufacturing companies.
At $120 million, AI Venture Fund II would be considerably smaller than the first AI Fund tranche. Still, it’s more than double what Ng reportedly originally hoped to raise — $50 million — for the AI Fund’s follow-up.
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Evidence for this was apparent during Mobile World Congress in Barcelona earlier this year, as time and time again your TechCrunch reporter bumped into Northern European VCs scouting startups on the “Iberian peninsula” (Spain and Portugal).
These young companies bring a killer combination that VCs love: significantly lower operating costs and far less punchy valuations.
Juncosa started his VC career at Nauta Capital in Barcelona and went on to co-found the early-stage VC firm Encomenda Smart Capital. He then become CFO of Carto, a data visualization SaaS company based in the U.S. and Spain, which has raised more than $100 million.
Lastly, the European Investment Bank’s venture capital arm also backed a new fund in Spain this year which aims to invest €1 billion ($1.1 billion) in growth-stage tech startups.
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The industries Findley is referring to include: manufacturing, construction, transportation and energy. The firm backed 16 companies in its first fund, including Solvento, a payments infrastructure startup for trucking companies in Mexico; OneRail, a last-mile logistics startup; and Prokeep, a communications platform for distributors, among others.
“What we saw back then was as true as we see today,” Ironspring co-founder and general partner, Ty Findley told TechCrunch. “There is a big gap in the venture industry that deeply studies and has genuine GP market fit with these industrial markets and can help them navigate a pretty challenging go-to-market [process].
Ironspring being based in Austin is an asset, Findley said, due to where they invest — a narrative that conflicts with how many others in the venture ecosystem view the once emerging tech hub. Findley said that many of the industries the firm is focused on have history in Austin, and with Tesla moving its headquarters there and the recently approved $6.4 billion awarded from the infrastructure act for
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In 2023, the pair launched Identity.vc, a venture firm that invests in early-stage companies with at least one founder or executive who identifies as a member of the LGBTQ+ community. The Berlin-based firm is currently raising €50 million for its debut fund and has closed on €15 million thus far.
The founding partners also brought on Mari Luukkainen, who has prior operating and investing experience, as a principal.
These young companies bring a killer combination that VCs love: significantly lower operating costs and far less punchy valuations.
“The majority of LGBTQ+ founders: They are not out to their investors because they feel that could be a disadvantage,” Klein told TechCrunch. “We think that is a big mistake and [that means] you don’t have this trusted relationship with your investors. Those investors who don’t like it, you don’t want to have them on your cap table. You should be able to be yourself.”
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The U.S. budget is by far the largest, with contracts worth $53 billion to major tech firms between 2019 and 2022. But the rise of defense tech as an investment trend is very much global.
German-based AI startup Helsing is a strong example of the unprecedented amounts of capital available to tech companies with military potential.
Investor appetite is particularly strong for tech solutions with dual-use potential, meaning that they can be used for both civilian and military applications. The idea that defense tech can benefit society more broadly is also reflected in the rising concept of “resilience tech.” More than the worn-out term of “defense,” the word “resilience” reflects the idea that innovation can make democratic societies less vulnerable to attacks and help them recover faster.
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The U.S.-headquartered venture capital firm will retain its name, while Matrix Partners India will rebrand to Z47 and Matrix Partners China will rename itself MPC. Matrix began operating the India affiliated fund in 2006 and the China fund in 2008.
The unexpected rebranding takes effect July 1. Notably, Matrix’s announcement referred to its India and China operations as “entities operating under the Matrix name” rather than as its own units.
Matrix is undertaking the “renaming and organizational update” to “clarify the local approach each of these teams has taken to operating in each of their geographies since inception and the organizational independence of each team,” Matrix Partners said in a post.
Hebbia and Andreessen Horowitz didn’t respond to a request for comment.
The move follows Sequoia’s splitting of its India and Southeast Asia and China units last year amid geopolitical tension between China and the U.S.
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Other prominent firms that successfully defied the VC fundraising slump this year include Andreessen Horowitz, which secured $7.2 billion for several of its funds; General Catalyst, which is reportedly wrapping up a $6 billion fundraise; and Norwest, with its $3 billion capital haul.
Kleiner Perkins said in a blog post that it will continue to invest in enterprise software, consumer, healthcare, fintech and hardtech startups, as it has for its previous fund. But what’s changed is the opportunity to make these industries more efficient with the help of AI. The firm has already backed a few buzzy AI-driven startups, including business application search tool Glean and Harvey, an AI assistant for lawyers. However, compared to other large VC firms, Kleiner Perkins’s investments in prominent AI companies remains modest.
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Lien told TechCrunch that many waste management companies collect from so many construction sites that they often don’t know where their bins are, how many of them there are or when they will need to be emptied.
“Since the very beginning, what stood out then, and what is still true now, the data that they have access to in the industry is so limited,” Lien said. “If you compare it to any other process industry, there is no one that would accept the level of data, or insight or knowledge, and that’s the general problem.”
The Oslo-based startup puts its sensors into construction waste bins and uses radar and machine learning technology to create digital twins of each bin. Waste companies can then use Sensorita’s software to get updates from where their bins are and how full they are and use that data to better plan pickups.
Plus, household waste is fragmented and backed by public money, which means it would be really hard to gain traction.
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The venture fundraising trend in 2024 is fairly clear by now: Large, established VC firms are continuing to attract capital from limited partners, while smaller, newer funds are finding it more difficult to raise.
But Industry Ventures’ latest fundraise should offer a dash of good news for emerging managers.
The common lore is that it’s very challenging for emerging managers to raise funds now, but Roland Reynolds, senior managing director at Industry Ventures, says that is not what he observes with the funds his firm backs.
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“I love people and connecting with people,” Alexander-Laine told TechCrunch. “We know how to merge talent and business, and found that athletes are good in these spaces. We also have the stamina to conquer other things and other entities outside of sports.”
They, along with a third general partner, Ivan Lopez, have invested in seven startups so far with a small first fund close. These include a hair care company by Issa Rae called Sienna Naturals; a pet product company started by Kaley Cuoco called Oh Norman!; Ciara’s Ten to One Rum; and Kudos, a diaper company backed by Mark Cuban and Gwyneth Paltrow.
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In a letter shared publicly on Monday, U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown (D-OH), Chairman of the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, along with Senators Ron Wyden (D-OR), Tammy Baldwin (D-WI) and John Fetterman (D-PA) pointed out that customers of companies that partnered with banking-as-a-service startup Synapse have not been able to access their money since mid-May.
San Francisco-based Synapse operated a service that allowed others (mainly fintechs) to embed banking services into their offerings. For instance, a software provider that specialized in payroll for 1099 contractor-heavy businesses used Synapse to provide an instant payment feature; others used it to offer specialized credit/debit cards. Until last year, it was providing those types of services as an intermediary between banking partner Evolve Bank & Trust and business banking startup Mercury until Evolve and Mercury decided to work directly with each other and cut out Synapse as a middleman.
The Senators also expressed concern and being disturbed by “the potential shortfall of $65 to $96 million between what consumers are owed and the funds held on their behalf by Synapse’s partner banks,” calling it “both deeply troubling and completely unacceptable.”
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Article 9 refers to the EU’s Sustainable Finance Disclosures Regulation Act, which puts the onus on investment firms to ensure their investments have a positive impact on society or the environment.
Seaya has been around for 12 years, mainly focusing on mission-driven startups in Europe and LatAm. The new “Andromeda” fund will invest in growth companies that specialize in energy transition, decarbonization, sustainable food value chains, and the circular economy.
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The Forestay II fund will invest across Europe and Israel, with a “sweet spot” of leading growth rounds of $10 million to $15 million, at the inflection point of a company, it said.
As Chief Digital Officer in large corporations, mainly the biopharma clinical space, I had the chance to look at the entire value chain, from early research down to distribution, in fairly sizable enterprises,” he told TechCrunch over a call. “So by knowing the enterprise inside out, that’s why we decided to focus on enterprise and enterprise AI.
The Forestay fund was founded as a fund of B-Flexion, the private investment vehicle created by the Bertarelli family that is best known for building Serono into the third-largest biotech business globally, before its merger with Merck KGaA.
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While many emerging VCs are struggling to raise second funds, J2’s latest vehicle is more than double its $67.5 million debut fund from 2021.
“Our portfolio is national-security adjacent, but not defense-focused,” said Alexander Harstrick, J2’s managing partner. The firm does not invest in technologies that protect critical national infrastructure or help deter attacks, such as drones, robotics, or surveillance tech.
J2 backs companies at the pre-seed stage to Series A and writes checks that range from $1 million to $5 million. The firm’s limited partners include JPMorgan and New Mexico State Investment Council.
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The Driving Forces solo general partner announced on LinkedIn this week that he was shutting down his $5 million fintech and deep tech VC fund that he started in 2020, calling the past four years “a wild ride.”
A healthy performance of his first, small fund wasn’t enough. He told TechCrunch that with increasing competition for what is, essentially, still a small number of hard tech and deep tech deals, he realized it would be a challenge for smaller funds like his.
“This wasn’t easy, but it’s the right choice for the current market,” he said.
During that time, he was also involved in building the first AI and deep tech investor network with Handwave, collaborating with investors at companies such as Nvidia, M12, Microsoft’s Venture Fund, Intel Capital and First Round Capital.
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The figures for 2024 aren’t looking much stronger — Dealroom counts 1.1k so far this year — although a reporting lag typically means early stage rounds are under-reported.
1. SFC Capital
2. Maven
3. Mercia Ventures
4. Fuel Ventures
5. Future Planet Capital
6. SyndicateRoom
7. Haatch
8. Octopus Ventures
9. Seedcamp
10. Development Bank of Wales
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European VC returns are better than North American VC returns over 10 and 15 year horizons, finds a new report from industry body Invest Europe, based on data from investment firm Cambridge Associates.
European VC yielded 20.77% net IRR (internal rate of return) over 10 years, compared to North American VC’s 18.18%. Over a 15 year period too, European VC has better returns: 16.57% IRR to North American VC’s 16.09% IRR.
IRR is an (imperfect) measure used in private equity to compare fund performance. It shows the expected annualised return a fund should generate; the higher the IRR, the better the performance. Most early-stage VC funds will be aiming to get an IRR above 30%.
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Startups scrambled to follow the new VC mantra. More than 140k tech workers were laid off around the world in 2022; expansion plans were put on ice and markets were shut; and getting into the black became priority number one for founders.
Now, after an undeniably tough few years for our industry, more and more scaleups are announcing profitability.
Sifted hopes to track Europe’s biggest profitable private tech companies in this new database. We’ve included companies that have raised £100m+ and made an annual profit of £10m+. Data comes from news articles and data platform Dealroom.
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The report surveyed 104 CVCs around the world, with a collective £20bn in assets under management. Over 60% invested via the balance sheet; less than a third have a separate fund vehicle. Respondents include Aviva, DMG Ventures, BMW i Ventures, FT Ventures, ING, Legal & General, Schenker Ventures, Societe Generale and Wayra.
Looking at sectors, B2B companies are the favourite destination for corporate capital, followed by AI and machine learning and fintech. B2C and healthtech startups are less in favour. 93% of respondents said they had a very specific sector focus.
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