Several interesting deals and new funds were announced in the last couple of weeks — and there are more to come.
In talks: Revolut is reportedly seeking a new funding round at a $65 billion valuation; SpaceX is looking to raise $250 million at a $400 billion valuation; and Lovable is on track to raise $150 million at a $2 billion valuation. Meanwhile, LangChain may become a unicorn soon.
Also: Rivian spinoff Also, a micromobility startup building e-bikes and more, raised $200 million from Greenoaks Capital.
Concrete: Colorado-based startup Terra CO2 locked in a $124 million Series B to slash the carbon footprint of concrete.
AI for robots: Genesis AI, a startup that aims to build a foundational model for enabling robots to perform tasks, emerged from stealth with a $105 million seed round (yes, seed) co-led by Eclipse and Khosla Ventures.
From Dubai to Spain: Huspy, a proptech startup that streamlines finding homes and mortgages, closed a $59 million Series B to double down across the Middle East and expand in Europe. It is already present in Spain.
Happy accidents: After rediscovering a forgotten hydrogen tech, Tulum Energy raised $27 million to build a pilot plant in Mexico alongside a steel plant belonging to Techint Group, out of which it spun out.
Quantum collective: Israeli quantum startup Qedma just raised a $26 million round with participation from IBM, which takes the stance that driving quantum further requires a community effort.
Composed: Tailor, whose system Omakase allows AI agents to securely access its enterprise resource planning platform via API, raised a $22 million Series A. "[B]usinesses want systems that can be composed, not hardcoded," CEO Yo Shibata said.
Battle-tested: Co-founded by Pipedrive CEO and angel investor Ragnar Sass, Estonian VC firm Darkstar completed a first close of approximately $17.5 million to invest in defense solutions that have been tested in combat in Ukraine, with the goal of helping re-arm Europe.
Alum backing alums: Phosphor Capital, a venture firm launched by Zeus Living founder Kulveer Taggar, will solely invest in Y Combinator companies, and YC CEO Garry Tan is one of its investors.
No comments:
Post a Comment