Sourcery (5/31-6/4)
Circle, BoughtbyMany, QuintoAndar, Chipper, Spruce, Spiff, Truebill, Jeeves, Pinwheel, Fold, Trellis, Thirty Madison, Synchron, Brightside, HumanFirst, Gong, UrbanCo, Project44, Guild Education...
Last Week (5/31-6/4):
Relevant deals include the 60+ deals across stages below.
I've categorized the deals below into four categories, Fintech, Care, Future of Work, and Sustainability, and ordered from later-stage rounds to early-stage rounds. Highlighted deals include Wefox, Circle, BoughtbyMany, QuintoAndar, Chipper, Spruce, Spiff, Truebill, Jeeves, Pinwheel, Fold, Trellis, Thirty Madison, Synchron, Brightside, HumanFirst, Gong, UrbanCo, Project44, Guild Education, LeoLabs, Bench, Locus, Shippo, Cognigy, Hungryroot, Comunix, Shef, Lambdatest, System, Authentic, Ganaz, Oak9, Stemma, Paloma, Ditto, Climavision; Depop, Cloudera, BeyondTrust, StackOverflow, x.ai, Media Math; SentinelOne, DLocal, Sprinklr, EverCommerce, Marqueta, Monday.com, Krispy Kreme, Confluent, WeTransfer, 1st Dibs; Babylon Health
Final numbers on U.S. M&A YTD at the bottom.
Deals
Sources: TS, Pro Rata, FinSMEs, Pitchbook, StrictlyVC
Fintech:
- Wefox, a Berlin-based digital insurer focused on personal insurance products, raised $650 million in Series C funding, valuing it at $3 billion. Target Global led the round and was joined by investors OMERS Ventures, Gsquared, Merian, Horizons Ventures, Eurazeo, Mubadala, Creditease, Salesforce Ventures, Speedinvest, Alma Mundi Ventures, Victory Park Capital, GR Capital, Mountain Partners, Seedcamp, and Sound Ventures. New investors include LGT, Partners Group, Jupiter, and FinTLV.
- Circle, a Boston-based financial technology firm that provides payments infrastructure for businesses, raised $440 million in funding. Investors included Fidelity Management and Research Company, Marshall Wace, Willett Advisors, Intersection Fintech Ventures, Atlas Merchant Capital, Digital Currency Group, FTX, Breyer Capital, Valor Capital Group, Pillar VC, and Michael J. Price and Friends.
- Bought By Many, a London-based digital pet insurance provider, raised $350 million in Series D funding at a pre-money valuation of more than $2 billion. EQT Growth led the round and was joined by investors Octopus Ventures and Munich Re Ventures.
- QuintoAndar, a São Paulo-based digital real estate marketplace, raised $300 million in Series E funding, valuing it at $4 billion. Ribbit Capital led the round and was joined by investors including SoftBank, LTS, Maverik, Alta Park, Kaszek Ventures, Dragoneer and Accel’s Kevin Efrusy.
- Homeward, an Austin-based digital home-buying startup, raised $136 million in Series B funding, valuing at more than $800 million. Norwest Venture Partners led the round and was joined by investors Blackstone, Breyer Capital, Adams Street, Javelin, and LiveOak Venture Partners.
- Capchase, a New York-based provider of non-dilutive capital, raised $125 million in Series A equity and debt funding. QED Investors led, and was joined by insiders Bling Capital, ScifiVC and Caffeinated Capital.www.capchase.com
- Chipper Cash, a cross-border payments startup focused on the African market, raised $100 million in Series C funding. SVB Capital led the round and was joined by investors Decines Capital, Ribbit Capital, One Way Ventures, 500 Startups, Tribe Capital, Brue2 Ventures, and Jeff Bezos.
- Yieldstreet, a New York City-based digital alternative investment platform, raised $100 million in Series C funding. Tarsadia Investments led the round and was joined by investors Kingfisher Investment, Top Tier Capital Partners, Gaingels, Edison Partners, Soros Fund Management, Greenspring Associates, Raine Ventures, Greycroft, and Expansion Venture Capital.
- Kushki, an Ecuador-based digital payments infrastructure startup, raised $86 million in Series B funding, valuing it at $600 million. SoftBank led the round and was joined by investors DILA Capital, Kaszek, Clocktower Technology Ventures, and Magma Partners.
- Spruce, a New York City-based digital real estate transactions startup, raised $60 million in Series C funding. Zigg Capital led the round and was joined by investors Bessemer Venture Partners and Scale Venture Partners.
- Spiff, a Salt Lake City-based provider of sales commission software, raised $46 million in Series B funding. Lightspeed Venture Partners led the round and was joined by investors Salesforce Ventures, Stripes, and Norwest Venture Partners.
- MotoRefi, an Arlington, Va.-based digital auto refinancing startup, raised $45 million in Series B funding. Goldman Sachs Asset Management led the round and was joined by investors IA Capital, Moderne Ventures, Accomplice, Link Ventures, Motley Fool Ventures, and CMFG Ventures.
- Truebill, a Silver Spring, Md.-based personal finance app, raised $45 million in Series D funding. Accel led the round and was joined by investors Bessemer Venture Partners, Cota Capital, and Eldridge Industries.
- Belvo, open finance API platform for Latin America, raised $43 million in Series A funding from Future Positive, Kibo Ventures, FJ Labs, Kaszek, MAYA Capital and Venture Friends.http://axios.link/4oxW
- Nayya, a New York City-based digital health insurance benefits platform, raised $37 million in Series B funding. SVB Capital and ICONIQ Growth led the round and were joined by investors Bow Capital, Felicis Ventures, Social Leverage, SemperVirens, Guardian Strategic Ventures, Unum Business VEntures, and CNO Financial Group.
- Synctera, a San Francisco-based fintech startup that connects community banks with digital finance applications, raised $33 million in Series A funding. Fin VC led the round and was joined by investors Mastercard, Gaingels, Lightspeed Venture Partners, Diagram Ventures, SciFi Ventures, and Scribble Ventures.
- Jeeves, a New York City-based expense management platform for startups, raised $31 million in seed and Series A funding. Andreessen Horowitz led the $26 million Series A round and was joined by investors YC Continuity Fund, Jaguar Ventures, Urban Innovation Fund, Uncorrelated Ventures, Clocktower Technology Ventures, 9 Yards Capital, BlockFi Ventures, and Stanford University. Plaid co-founder William Hockey led the $5 million seed round.
- Divido, a London-based retail finance startup, raised $30 million in Series B funding. HSBC and ING led the round and were joined by investors Sony Innovation Fund by IGV, SBI Investment, OCS, Global Brain, DG Daiwa Ventures, DN Capital, Dawn Capital, IQ Capital, and Amex Ventures.
- Pinwheel, a New York-based the payroll API, has raised $20M in Series A funding. Coatue led, and was joined by Primary Ventures, Semper Virens, First Round Capital and Upfront Ventures.www.getpinwheel.com
- Plum, an Indian health insurance startup, raised $15.6 million in Series A funding. Tiger Global led, and was joined by Sequoia Capital India, Tanglin Venture Partners, Incubate Fund and Gemba Capital.http://axios.link/dIAD
- Fold, a San Francisco-based bitcoin rewards app, raised $13 million in Series A funding. Craft Ventures led, and was joined by M13, Slow Ventures and Bessemer Venture Partners.www.foldapp.com
- PrizePool, a Palo Alto-based savings account provider that awards cash prizes, raised $10 million in Series A funding. M13 led the round and was joined by investors Accomplice, Bling Capital, World Innovation Labs, and Coatue.
- Trellis Technologies, a San Francisco-based insurance technology company, raised $10 million in Series A funding. QED Investors led the round and was joined by investors including NYCA Partners and General Catalyst.
- Kin, a Chicago-based insurance technology startup, raised an additional $5.3 million in Series C funding. Symphony Ventures and Flourish Ventures invested.
- The Beans, a San Francisco-based financial technology startup, raised $2 million in funding. Precursor Ventures led the round and was joined by investors including Relay Ventures, One Planet VC, Swing Ventures, and Oxford Angel Fund.
. . .
Care:
- Thirty Madison, a New York-based maker of products for chronic health conditions, raised $140 million in Series C funding. HealthQuest Capital led, and was joined by Mousse Partners, Bracket Capital and insiders Polaris Partners, Johnson & Johnson Northzone and Greycroft. www.thirtymadison.com
- Intrinsic, a New York City-based company acquiring health and wellness e-commerce companies, raised $113 million in Series A funding. Define Ventures led the round and was joined by investors including Link Ventures.
- Phil, a San Francisco-based software therapy deployment platform, raised $56 million in Series D funding. Warburg Pincus led the round.
- Synchron, a New York City-based neurotechnology company developing brain-machine interfaces, raised $40 million in Series B funding. Khosla Ventures led the round and was joined by investors Forepont Capital Partners, ID8 Investments, Shanda Group, General Advance, Subversive Capital, re.Mind Capital, NeuroTechnology Investors, METIS Innovative, and the University of Melbourne.
- Brightside, a San Francisco-based mental health telemedicine platform, raised $24 million in Series A funding. ACME Ventures led, and was joined by Triventures. www.brightside.com
- HumanFirst, a San Francisco-based remote health care startup, raised $12 million in Series A funding. Maverick Ventures led the round and was joined by investors Lux Capital, Arkitekt Ventures, Boost VC, SV Angel, Village Global, and Threshold Ventures.
- Laguna Health, a recovery assurance startup, raised $6.6 million co-led by Pitango HealthTech and LionBird. www.lagunahealth.com
- Rocket Doctor, a Toronto-based telemedicine startup, raised $3.8 million in seed funding. F7 Ventures and Emergent Medical Associates’ Dr. Irv Edwards led the round.
. . .
Future of Work:
- Celonis, a Munich- and New York City-based enterprise software company focused on data analysis, raised $1 billion in Series D funding, valuing it at $11 billion. Durable Capital Partners and T. Rowe Price Associates led the round, and were joined by investors Franklin Templeton, Splunk Ventures, and Arena Holdings.
- Gong, a Palo Alto-based sales software platform, raised $250 million in Series E funding, valuing it at $7.25 billion. Franklin Templeton led the round and was joined by investors Coatue, Salesforce Ventures, Sequoia Capital, Thrive Capital, and Tiger Global.
- Urban Co., a home services marketplace, raised $255 million in Series F funding at a $2.1 billion valuation co-led by Prosus Ventures, Dragoneer and Wellington Management. Other backers include Vy Capital, Tiger Global and Steadview.http://axios.link/o4OO
- Project44, a Chicago-based supply chain logistics platform, raised $202 million in Series E funding, valuing it at $1.2 billion. Goldman Sachs Asset Management and Emergence Capital led the round and were joined by investors Girteka and Lineage Logistics.
- Exabeam, a Foster City, Calif.-based cybersecurity analytics company, raised $200 million in Series F funding, valuing it at $2.4 billion. Blue Owl Capital led the round and was joined by investors Acrew Capital, Lightspeed Venture Partners, and Norwest Venture Partners.
- Outreach, a Seattle-based sales intelligence startup, raised $200 million, valuing it at $4.2 billion. Premji Invest and Steadfast Capital Ventures led the round and were joined by investors including Sequoia Capital, Tiger Global Management, and Vista Equity Partners.
- Guild Education, a Denver-based firm enabling employer-sponsored education opportunities, raised $150 million in Series E funding, valuing it at $3.75 billion. Investors included Bessemer Venture Partners, Cowboy Ventures, D1 Capital Partners, Emerson Collective, General Catalyst, GSV, Harrison Metal, ICONIQ Capital, Next Play Capital, Redpoint Ventures, and Salesforce Ventures.
- Alation, a Redwood City, Calif.-based enterprise software company, raised $110 million in Series D funding, valuing it at $1.2 billion. Riverwood Capital led the round and was joined by investors including Sanabil Investments and Snowflake Ventures.
- LeoLabs, a Menlo Park, Calif.-based mapping and space services company tracking low-earth-orbit objects, raised $65 million in Series B funding. Insight Partners led the round and was joined by investors including Velvet Sea Ventures.
- Bench, a Vancouver-based bookkeeping service for small businesses, raised $60 million in Series C funding. Contour Venture Partners led the round and was joined by investors including Altos Ventures, iNovia Capital, BMO T&I, Sage, and Shopify.
- Locus, a San Francisco-based supply chain decision-making automation platform, raised $50 million in Series C funding. GIC led, and was joined by Qualcomm Ventures and insiders Tiger Global and Falcon Edge. www.locus.sh
- Shippo, a San Francisco-based provider of shipping software, raised $50 million led by Bessemer Venture Partners at a $1 billion valuation. http://axios.link/C0Qf
- Cognigy, a German low-code conversational AI platform, raised $44 million in Series B funding. Insight Partners led, and was joined by backers DN Capital, Global Brain, Nordic Makers, Inventures and Digital Innovation & Growth. http://axios.link/CjhU
- Hungryroot, a New York City-based personalized grocery service, raised $40 million in Series C funding round. L Catterton led the round. The deal values the firm at $750 million, per a source close to the situation.
- New Stand, a New York City-based convenience store company, raised $40 million in Series B funding. Brookfield Property Group led the round.
- Redacted, a San Francisco-based cloud security company, raised $35 million in Series B funding. Ten Eleven Ventures led the round and was joined by investors Valor Equity Partners and SVB Capital.
- Comunix, an Israeli social gaming startup whose titles include Pokerface, raised $30 million in Series A funding. March Capital led, and was joined by Powerhouse, Woori Capital, Altshuler Shaham, Kaedan Capital, Velo Partners, Moon Active and Baladi Ventures, also participated in the funding round. www.getcomunix.com
- Shef, a Redwood City, Calif.-based platform enabling cooks to sell homemade meals, raised $20 million in Series A funding. Andreessen Horowitz led the round and was joined by investors Craft Ventures, M13, Y Combinator, Padma Lakshmi, Tiffany Haddish, Katy Perry, Orlando Bloom, chef Aaron Sanchez, and NBA player Andre Iguodala.
- Iterative, a San Francisco-based enterprise machine learning platform, raised $20 million in Series A funding. 468 Capital and Mesosphere co-founder Florian Leibert led the round and were joined by investors True Ventures and Afore Capital.
- Hypori, an Austin-based mobile cybersecurity startup, raised $20 million in Series A funding. GreatPoint Ventures led the round.
- DealHub.io, an Austin, Texas-based enterprise sales platform, raised $20 million in Series B funding. Israel Growth Partners led the round and was joined by Cornerstone Venture Partners.
- LambdaTest, a San Francisco-based cross-browser testing platform, raised $16 million in Series B funding. Sequoia Capital led the round and was joined by investors Telstra Ventures, and Wamda Capital.
- Z League, a gaming tournament platform, raised $13.5 million in new funding. Backers include Andreessen Horowitz and Goodwater Capital. www.zleague.gg
- System, a New York-based data organization and discovery startup led by Adam Bly (ex-Spotify), raised $12.2 million, per an SEC filing. Backers include Lux Capital and Acrew Capital. www.system.com
- Authenticx, a Carmel, Ind.-based customer insights company, raised $7.5 million in Series A funding. Signal Peak Ventures led the round and was joined by investors including Sopris Capital, M25, Allos Ventures, and Elevate Ventures.
- Ganaz, a Seattle-based workforce management platform, raised $7 million in Series A funding from Bessemer Venture Partners, Founders’ Co-op, Taylor Ventures, AgFunder and Techstars.http://axios.link/C3Vz
- Filtered, a Boston-based hiring platform for the engineering and technology industries, raised $7 million in seed funding from investors AI Fund and Silicon Valley Data Capital.
- LoginID, a San Mateo, Calif.-based authentication provider, raised $6 million in seed funding. www.loginid.io
- Oak9, a Chicago-based security startup, raised $5.9 million in seed funding. Menlo Ventures led the round and was joined by investors including Hyde Park Angels and Uncorrelated Ventures.
- Kitt, a London-based proptech startup connecting landlords and office tenants, raised $5 million in seed funding. Barclays Ventures led the round.
- Stemma, a Redmond, Wash.-based database company, raised $4.8 million in seed funding. Sequoia Capital led the round.
- Paloma, a New York City-based sales communication company, raised $4 million in seed funding. Laconia Capital Group led the round and was joined by investors including Philip Krim from Casper and David Heath from Bombas.
-Ditto, a copy collaboration startup, raised $1.5 million from Greycroft, YC, Soma Capital, Decent Capital and Twenty Two VC. http://axios.link/UCpH
. . .
Sustainability:
- Climavision, a Louisville, Ky.-based weather services and intelligence platform, raised $100 million from The Rise Fund. www.climavision.com
- Faction Technology, a South San Francisco, Calif-based maker of electric, driverless fleets, raised $4.3 million in seed funding. Trucks Venture Capital and Fifty Years led the round.
Acquisitions & PE:
- Etsy (Nasdaq: ETSY) agreed to buy Depop, a London-based secondhand fashion marketplace, for $1.63 billion in cash.This is millennial-driven Etsy trying to get younger, as around 90% of Depop's users are under 26 years old. Depop raised around $100 million in VC funding, most recently in 2019 at a $240 million post-money valuation. Backers include General Atlantic, Balderton Capital, Creandum, Octopus Ventures and TempoCap. "Depop, founded in 2011, shares Etsy’s love of secondhand clothing. But while Etsy’s brand leans more towards the vintage and cosy, Depop’s is more fashionable." — James Vincent, The Verge
- KKR and Clayton Dubilier & Rice have agreed to acquire Cloudera, a Santa Clara, Calif.-based enterprise data cloud software company, in an all-cash transaction valued at $5.3 billion.
- The Blackstone Group and Starwood Capital increased their takeover offer for hotel operator Extended Stay America (Nasdaq: STAY) by $1 per share to $20.50, after Institutional Shareholder Services recommended that shareholders reject the original $6 billion bid. http://axios.link/ipgK
- Dye & Durham (TSX: DND), a Canadian cloud software company, received a C$3.4 billion management-led buyout offer. http://axios.link/WbSL
- Clearlake Capital Group invested in BeyondTrust, an Atlanta-based provider of privileged access management software for businesses. Financial terms were not disclosed.
- Nasdaq acquired a majority stake in Puro.earth, a Finland-based online carbon capture marketplace. http://axios.link/l1vl
- Symphony Technology Group led a consortium acquiring the products business of Milpitas, Calif.-based cybersecurity firm FireEye (NASDAQ: FEYE) for $1.2 billion.
- Prosus agreed to buy Stack Overflow, a New York-based coding Q&A site, for $1.8 billion. Stack Overflow had raised $155 million from Andreessen Horowitz, Index Ventures, Spark Capital, USV, GIC and Silver Lake Waterman.http://axios.link/5fAz
- Bizzabo acquired x.ai, a New York City-based maker of an automated meeting scheduling tool. FirstMark Capital and SoftBank backed x.ai.
- MediaMath, a New York-based operating system for marketers and ad agencies, hired Luma Partners and Centerview Partners to explore strategic options, including a possible sale, per WSJ. The 14-year-old company has raised over $400 million (plus got a PPP loan) from firms like Searchlight Capital Partners, Spring Lake Equity Partners, Akamai, Safeguard Scientifics, Catalyst Investors and Observatory Capital. http://axios.link/LiTZ
. . .
IPOs:
- DLocal, a Uruguayan cross-border payments company, raised $618 million in its IPO. The company priced at $21 (above $16–$18 range), for an initial market cap of $6.2 billion, and closed its first day of trading (Nasdaq: DLO) at $32.39 per share. DLocal had raised $350 million from firms like Alkeon Capital, Bond Capital, D1 Capital Partners and Tiger Global. http://axios.link/yOEM
-SentinelOne, a Mountain View, Calif.-based autonomous cybersecurity platform, filed for an IPO. It plans to list on the NYSE (S) and reports a $118 million net loss on $93 million in revenue for 2020. The company raised over $260 million in VC funding, most recently at a $3.1 billion valuation, from firms like Insight Partners (15.8% pre-IPO stake), Tiger Global (12.4%), Third Point Ventures (11.3%), Redpoint Ventures (8%), DCVC (5.2%) and Anchorage Capital (5%). http://axios.link/q6wf
- Sprinklr, which provides customer experience management software for enterprises, filed to raise up to $100 million. The New York City-based company plans to list on the NYSE under the symbol CXM.
- EverCommerce, a Denver-based service commerce platform, filed for an IPO. It plans to list on the Nasdaq (EVCM) and reports a $60 million net loss on $338 million in revenue for 2020. Shareholders include Providence Equity Partners (50.6% pre-IPO stake) and Silver Lake (37.1%). http://axios.link/NtwV
-First Advantage, an Atlanta-based background check company owned by Silver Lake, filed for a $100 million IPO. It plans to list on the Nasdaq (FA) and reports a $64 million net loss on $509 million in revenue for 2020. http://axios.link/psnK
- Marqueta, an Oakland, Calif.-based payments startup, is aiming to raise more than $1 billion in an IPO that would value the company at more than $12 billion, per regulatory filings. It plans to sell around 45.4 million shares priced between $20 and $24 per share. Marqueta would list on the Nasdaq under the symbol MQ.
- Monday.com, an Israel-based project management platform, is seeking to raise more than $500 million in a U.S. listing that would value the company at more than $6 billion, per regulatory filings. It plans to sell 3.7 million shares priced between $125 and $140 per share. Monday.com would list on the Nasdaq under the symbol MNDY.
- LifeStance Health Group, a Scottsdale, Ariz.-based mental health care provider, is looking to raise up to $680 million in an IPO that would value the company at nearly $6.4 billion, per regulatory filings. It plans to sell 40 million shares priced between $15 and $17 per share. LifeStance would list on the Nasdaq under the symbol LFST.
- Zeta Global Holdings, a New York City-based marketing technology company, is seeking to raise more than $270 million in an IPO that would value the company at up to $2.3 billion, per regulatory filings. It plans to sell around 22.7 million shares priced between $10 and $12 per share. Zeta would list on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol ZETA.
- Krispy Kreme, a Winston-Salem, N.C.-based doughnut chain owned by JAB Holding and BDT Capital Partners, filed for a $100 million IPO, according to a preliminary regulatory filing. It reports a 23% revenue increase between Q1 2020 and Q1 2021, but remains unprofitable. The company did not disclose how many shares it plans to offer nor its offering price. Krispy Kreme would list on the Nasdaq under the symbol DNUT.
- Confluent, a Mountain View, Calif.-based data software firm, filed for a $100 million IPO, according to a preliminary regulatory filing. The company did not disclose how many shares it plans to offer nor its offering price. Confluent would list on the Nasdaq under the symbol CFLT.
- WeTransfer, a Germany-based file transfer platform, plans to seek an IPO in Amsterdam that would value it at €1 billion ($1.2 billion), per Bloomberg.
- TaskUs, a New Braunfels, Tx.-based provider of outsourcing services, now plans to raise $304 million in an offering of 13.2 million shares (58% sold by insiders) priced between $22 to $24. Blackstone backs the firm.
- 1stdibs.com, a New York City-based e-commerce platform for artwork and antiques, plans to raise $112 million in an offering of 5.8 million shares priced between $18 to $21. Benchmark, Insight Partners, and Spark Capital back the firm.
- Xometry, a Rockville, Md.-based marketplace for on-demand manufacturing, filed to raise $100 million. Investors include Highland Capital Partners, T. Rowe Price Associates, and Foundry Group.
. . .
SPACs:
- BabylonHealth, a British telehealth platform, agreed to go public at an implied $4.2 billion valuation via Alkuri Global Acquisition (Nasdaq: KURI), a SPAC led by ex-Groupon CEO Rich Williams. Babylon had raised $625 million from firms like Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, Munich Re, Kinnevik and Vostok New Ventures. http://axios.link/XomZ
- Pershing Square Tontine, the SPAC formed last summer by Bill Ackman, confirmed that it's in talks to buy a 10% stake in Universal Music Group from Vivendi at a $40 billion enterprise value.
- Chamath Palihapitiya’s Social Capital and Suvretta Capital Management filed for four SPACS focused on healthcare. Eachofthefour is seeking to raise $200 million.
Funds:
- Infinity Ventures, a Palo Alto-based VC firm formed by three ex-PayPal execs, is raising $125 million for its debut fund, per an SEC filing. www.infinityvc.capital
-Luminate Capital Partners, a software growth equity firm, raised $1 billion for its third fund. www.luminatecapital.com
-Recast Capital, a fund-of-funds focused on emerging VC managers, is raising $100 million for its debut vehicle, per an SEC filing. www.recastcapital.com
- Lux Capital, a New York City-based venture capital firm, closed an opportunities fund with $800 million and its seventh early-stage venture fund with $675 million.
- Refactor Capital, a Silicon Valley-based venture capital firm, has closed its third fund at $50 million.
- Toyota Ventures (fka Toyota AI Ventures) announced a pair of new, $150 million VC funds: One focused on frontier tech, another on climate tech. www.toyota.ventures
-Tuesday Capital (fka Crunchfund) raised $30 million for its fourth VC fund. http://axios.link/Qa7w
Final Numbers: 2021 is a record-breaker
Source: Refinitiv Deals Intelligence