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November 22, 2024

Sequoia marks up its 2020 fund by 25%

Sequoia says no exits, no problem.

The Silicon Valley titan of venture marked up the value of its 2020 Sequoia Capital U.S. Venture XVII fund by 24.6% in June, at the end of a 12-month period, according to PitchBook, which ran analysis on data from the Regents of the University of California’s endowment.

Sequoia’s markup is notable because the fund has yet to have any exits. This is also a favorable change for a 2020 fund vintage, given the fact that funds from that year aren’t predicted to perform well for any VC after the frothy valuations of 2020 and 2021. The mismatch is likely due to lofty AI valuations giving venture a sense of recovery that hasn’t come to fruition quite yet for other sectors. Sequoia is an investor in buzzy AI companies including: OpenAI, Glean and Harvey, among others.

Sequoia raised more than $800 million for Fund XVII which closed in 2022.

Keep reading the article on Tech Crunch


Money for tech that matters

Welcome to Startups Weekly — your weekly recap of everything you can’t miss from the world of startups. If you’d like to receive this newsletter in your inbox every Friday, sign up here!

The week before Thanksgiving is typically busy with announcements of all sorts, but this week has been particularly interesting. Money was flowing to big problems, like defense, cybersecurity, and health.

Most interesting startup stories from the week

N26 Barcelona office lobby
Image Credits:N26

Let’s start with the bad news and (temporarily?) dash hopes. But there’s good news too.

Low battery: Struggling Swedish unicorn Northvolt filed for bankruptcy in the U.S., delivering a setback to Europe’s hopes of staking a claim in the battery-manufacturing space.

Above the line: German fintech unicorn N26 had its first profitable quarter, with a net operating income of €2.8 million ($2.9 million) during the third quarter of 2024.

Wiz buys Dazz: Cybersecurity heavyweight Wiz acquired Dazz, a specialist in security remediation and risk management. According to sources, the cash-and-share deal is valued at $450 million, slightly more than Dazz’s recent $400 million post-money valuation.

Data pipelines: Alongside its Q3 earnings, cloud company Snowflake announced it agreed to acquire data pipeline management company Datavolo for an undisclosed sum.

Most interesting fundraises this week

woman browsing Oura display at Target
Image Credits:Oura/Target

Some mega-rounds were announced this week, and smaller but still hefty amounts also went to startups tackling big problems.

Quick commerce, quick funding: Indian quick-commerce startup Zepto raised $350 million in new funding, its third round of financing in only six months ahead of a planned IPO next year.

Gold rings: Finnish smart ring maker Oura raised a $75 million investment from glucose device maker Dexcom in a Series D round of funding that brought its valuation to more than $5 billion.

New unicorn: Lighthouse, a data analytics platform for the hospitality industry, raised a Series C round of $370 million led by KKR at a $1 billion valuation.

Egg-like fusion: U.K.-based nuclear startup Tokamak Energy raised $125 million to continue development of its egg-like reactor design. The U.K. Atomic Energy Authority spinout has been working on fusion since 2009.

Crossing the Atlantic: Portuguese dual-use drone startup Tekever raised €70 million ($74 million) in a Series B round led by Scottish investment company Baillie Gifford & Co. and the NATO Innovation Fund. The funding will help it expand into new markets, specifically the U.S.

Lightening up: Lightning AI, a startup that adapts PyTorch Lightning to enterprise needs and supports their AI plans, recently secured $50 million from Cisco Investments, J.P. Morgan, Nvidia, and K5 Global to expand the Lightning platform to new markets and grow its customer base.

Good cause: OneCell Diagnostics, a startup that works on limiting cancer recurrence with AI, raised $16 million in an oversubscribed Series A round that will help it expand into the U.S. and scale its business in India.

Most interesting VC and fund news this week

The Blue Bear Capital team stands in a field.
Image Credits:Blue Bear Capital

Bullish on Blue Bear: Blue Bear closed a $160 million third fund to back AI founders in climate, energy, and industry as part of its software-centric thesis.

Bling, bling: Bling Capital, the seed VC firm founded by former Khosla Ventures general partner Ben Ling, secured $270 million for its fourth fund, half of which is earmarked for follow-on investments.

Last but not least

Man at laptop in a defense bunker
Image Credits:Helsing

Defense tech startups raised almost $3 billion so far in 2024, according to Crunchbase. That’s already more than 2022’s previous $2.6 billion record and over only 85 deals compared to 113 that year.

Keep reading the article on Tech Crunch


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