• StrictlyVC: November 3, 2015

    Hi, all, happy Tuesday!

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    Volkswagen‘s emission cheating scandal is now threatening to spread to its Porsche brand.

    Google is aiming to begin drone deliveries in 2017.

    Tencent Holdings is about to invest $1 billion in China’s biggest online provider of on-demand services, as part of a new round that could value the startup at $20 billion.

    Twitter is changing its star icon for favorites to a heart and calling them “likes.”

    —–

    RelayRides Rebrands as Turo, Raises $47 Million Led by Kleiner

    RelayRides, the six-year-old, San Francisco-based peer-to-peer car rental service, has just rebranded itself as Turo. The company is also announcing $47 million in Series C funding led by Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers.

    The combined announcement is meant to grab attention. Turo doesn’t disclose the number of people using its platform or the number of cars currently available to renters. But the company says that 60 percent of its revenue now comes from out-of-town travelers who are renting the cars of people who are themselves flying out of town. And it wants to take the trend global, thus the name. CEO Andre Haddad says it evokes both “touring,” or, in Italian, “turismo.”

    The shift makes sense. There are plenty of hassles involved in airport parking, from the typical drive to the far-flung lot to the big parking tab. Cars are also depreciating assets from which more owners could easily wring money.

    Turo isn’t not alone in trying to capture people who are willing to hand over their car keys for a little more spending money. Among its other competitors are GetAround and Flightcar, a company whose major restructuring we wrote about last month.

    Still, there are differences. Whereas GetAround rents cars by the hour or day, Turo requires a one-day minimum and says the average rental period is 5.5 days.

    —–

    New Fundings

    3nder, a nearly two-year-old, London-based dating platform for “curious, open-minded people” (we won’t ask), has raised $500,000 in seed funding from an undisclosed group of angel investors. More here.

    Affinio, a two-year-old, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada-based marketing intelligence platform, has raised $4 million in Series A funding led by Whitecap Venture Partners, with participation from Build Ventures, Social StartsBRaVe Ventures, and unnamed angel investors. More here.

    Appier, a three-year-old, Taipei, Taiwan-based marketing company that uses artificial intelligence to find audiences for ads across mobile, desktop and tablet platforms, has raised $23 million in Series B funding from investors, including Sequoia Capital, JAFCO Asia, TransLink Capital, MediaTek Ventures and an investment arm of Singaporean bank UOB. The South China Morning Post has more here.

    ByeBuy, a six-month-old, London-based pay-as-you-go and on-demand alternative to gadget ownership, has raised €1 million in seed funding, including from the Commerzbank subsidiary Main Incubator, Rocket Internet’s venture arm Global Founders Capital, Hannover Innovation Fund, KRW Schindler Investments, and previous investor Seedcamp. TechCrunch has more here.

    Deporvillage, a five-year-old, Spanish ecommerce startup focused on sports apparel, has raised €3.7m ($4 million) in funding from backers that include la Nevera Roja, Ad4Ventures, Cabiedes & Partners, the Italian venture firm Programma 101, and business angels. More here.

    Iboss Cybersecurity, a nearly 13-year-old, San Diego-based cybersecurity company, has raised $35 million in Series A funding from Goldman Sachs‘ Private Capital Investing group. The San Diego Tribune has much more here.

    IPV, an 18-year-old, Cambridge, UK-based provider of multi-media content management systems, has raised £$2.5 million ($3.8 million) from Calculus Capital. More here.

    Localize, a two-year-old, San Francisco, Ca.-based business translation platform for both large, mid-size, and small businesses, has raised $1.1 million in seed funding led by FG Angels, with participation from Kima VentureszPark, and Matchstick Ventures. Business Insider has more here.

    Lumo, a four-year-old, Palo Alto, Ca.-based smart sensors and software platform, has raised $10 million in Series B financing. New investor Wuxi Healthcare Ventures led the latest round, along with previous investors Madrona Venture Group, Innovation Endeavors, AME Cloud VenturesInnovalue Capital, MAS Holdings, and SanDisk founder Eli Harari. TechCrunch has more here.

    Qraved, a two-year-old, Jakarta, Indonesia-based company that provides users with restaurant information, reviews, recommended dishes with photos, promotions, and the abiity to book a table, has raised $8 million in Series B funding co-led by Richmond Global Ventures and Gobi Partners, with participation from GWC and earlier backers Convergence Ventures, 500 Startups, Toivo Annus, and M&Y Partners. The outlet e27 has more here.

    Personal Genome Diagnostics, a five-year-old, Baltimore-based company that’s making advanced cancer genome testing products and services, has raised $21.4 million in Series A funding round led by New Enterprise Associates, with participation from Windham Venture Partners and Nanjing Kaiyuan Growth Capital Investments. More here.

    Sochat, a 1.5-year-old, San Francisco-based maker of a messaging app, has raised $2 million in seed funding led by Eniac Ventures, with participation from New Enterprise AssociatesGreylock PartnersSlow VenturesFoundation CapitalBetaworks, and Maiden Lane. VentureBeat has more here.

    SweetIQ, a 10-year-old, Montreal, Quebec-based platform for local marketing automation, has raised $4.2 million in Series A funding led by Plaza Ventures, with participation from Rothenberg VenturesDesjardins-InnovatechOtimo Retail Group, and earlier backer Real VenturesMore here.

    Tiny Owl, a Mumbai, India-based food ordering software startup, has raised $7.67 million from Matrix Partners and Sequoia Capital. The Economic Times has more here.

    Verge Genomics, a six-month-old, San Francisco-based Y Combinator alum that looks to use algorithms to help cure neurodegenerative disorders, has raised $4 million in seed funding led by IA Ventures, with participation from Two Sigma Ventures, Draper Associates, Great Oaks VC, Slow VenturesKarlin Ventures, and individual investors Elad Gil and David Lee. TechCrunch has more here.

    Vice Media, the nine-year-old, Brooklyn, N.Y.-based media company and content creation studio, is in talks with Disney to raise $200 million in new funding. The WSJ has more here.

    VISR, a nearly two-year-old, Toronto-based company whose app helps alert parents to safety issues involving their children’s social media and apps usage, has raised $1 million in seed funding from Horizons Ventures. TechCrunch hasmore here.

    Weave, a four-year-old, Lehi, Ut.-based unified communications platform that combines voice, SMS, and email with existing practice management software, has raised $15.5 million in Series B funding led by Crosslink Capital, with participation from Pelion Ventures, Peak Capital, A Capital, Y CombinatorInitialized Capital and individual investors Geoff Ralston and Joe Montana. The company has now raised $22 million altogether. More here.

    —–

    New Funds

    Sequoia Capital is raising its fifth India-focused fund, shows an SEC filing.More here.

    —–

    IPOs

    The IPO roadshow of digital payments company Square kicks off next week, reports CNBC.

    —–

    Exits

    Activision Blizzard has entered into an agreement to acquire King.com, maker of the wildly popular game Candy Crush $18.00 in cash per share, for a total equity value of $5.9 billion. TechCrunch has more here.

    Chef, a Seattle-based IT automation provider, has acquired VulcanoSec, a small German startup founded this year that specializes in security and compliance technology. Terms of the deal weren’t disclosed. GeekWire has more here.

    —–

    People

    Former Stanford student Elise Clougherty has dropped a high-profile lawsuit against venture capitalist Joe Lonsdale, a former paramour who Clougherty later accused of sexual assault. Lonsdale, who had strongly denied Clougherty’s allegations and filed a countersuit against her, including for defamation, has dropped his lawsuit, too. More here.

    Will Quist is the newest partner at four-year-old Slow Ventures. Quist joins the firm from the San Francisco-based investment firm Industry Ventures, where he spent the last five years as a managing director, having worked his way up from an associate position back in 2007. Previously, Quist was an analyst at Banc of America Securities. We have a bit more here.

    Napster cofounder and former Facebook president Sean Parker is part of a coalition that yesterday proposed an initiative to legalize the recreational use of marijuana in California and place a 15 percent tax on retail sales of the drug.More here.

    Anarghya Vardhana has joined Maveron as a new senior associate. Vardhana spent the last 1.5 years as an investor with Rothenberg Ventures in San Francisco. Previously, she spent several years at Google and one year as a product manager at the payments company Clinkle.

    On the heels of two other recent acquisitions (The Weather Company and Cleversafe), IBM is today announcing it has acquired the cloud brokerage firm Gravitant. Terms of the deal aren’t being disclosed. According to CrunchBase, the 11-year-old, Austin, Tex.-based company had raised roughly $40 million across three rounds, including from Cielo Private Equity and S3 Ventures. TechCrunch has more here.

    —–

    Jobs

    Prosper Marketplace is looking for a director of corporate development. The job is in San Francisco.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    Amazon is opening a bricks-and-mortar bookstore, its first.

    —–

    Detours

    What we think about when we run.

    That time I tried to buy an actual barrel of crude oil.

    Popular potato recipes for Thanksgiving.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    Now you can rent a newly renovated 5,442-square-foot store in SoHo, courtesy of Google.

  • RelayRides Rebrands as Turo, Raises $47 Million Led by Kleiner

    logo-blackRelayRides, the six-year-old, San Francisco-based peer-to-peer car rental service, has just rebranded itself as Turo. The company is also announcing $47 million in Series C funding led by Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers.

    The combined announcement is meant to grab attention. Turo doesn’t disclose the number of people using its platform or the number of cars currently available to renters. But the company says that 60 percent of its revenue now comes from out-of-town travelers who are renting the cars of people who are themselves flying out of town. And it wants to take the trend global, thus the name. CEO Andre Haddad says it evokes both “touring,” or, in Italian, “turismo.”

    The shift makes sense. There are plenty of hassles involved in airport parking, from the typical drive to the far-flung lot to the big parking tab. Cars are also depreciating assets from which more owners could easily wring money.

    Turo isn’t not alone in trying to capture people who are willing to hand over their car keys for a little more spending money. Among its other competitors are GetAround and Flightcar, a company whose major restructuring we wrote about last month.

    Still, there are differences. Whereas GetAround rents cars by the hour or day, Turo requires a one-day minimum and says the average rental period is 5.5 days.

    More here.

  • StrictlyVC: November 2, 2015

    It is November! Or Movember, for some of you. Hope it’s off to a great start.

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    The SEC on Friday approved rules that pave the way for Main Street investors to take equity stakes in startup businesses raising capital via crowdfunding. Much more here.

    —–

    Thomas Korte of AngelPad on Its “Disproportionate Success” with European Founders

    Soon, AngelPad, a five-year-old incubator that twice a year chooses roughly a dozen startups to coach over a three-month period, will host an invite-only “demo day” for a couple hundred angels and VCs in San Francisco.

    Likely, the investors are already looking forward to it. AngelPad has funded 115 companies to date, including its current cohort, and half a dozen of those companies are now valued at more than $100 million. Among them: the in-app video startup Vungle, the business-to-business marketplace Kinnek, and the mobile application performance management company Crittercism. AngelPad has also seen at least one major exit in MoPub, a startup that helped mobile publishers manage their ad inventory. Twitter acquired the company for $350 million in stock in the fall of 2013. The value of those shares shot to $1 billion after Twitter went public later that year.

    Recently, we grabbed some coffee with Thomas Korte, the former international product manager at Google who cofounded AngelPad with his wife, Carine Magescas, to get a sneak preview of its latest companies. (More on those to come.) We also talked about why he has seen “disproportional success with Euro founders.” More from that chat, edited for length, follows:

    Back in September, Bill Gurley questioned the unit economics of several companies, including the delivery service Postmates, which is one of your early investments. His concern was that their margins are too low relative to the amounts of money they’ve raised from investors. What did you make of his comments?

    I didn’t hear them, but I read about them, and I think he’s a very smart guy whose points were valid. I just know he got it completely wrong about Postmates’s unit economics. The other companies he mentioned at the time, including Instacart, are fundamentally different businesses. If you as a founder or investor think a company’s success is just about scale and grabbing market share, you’re living in a world of bedlam. I couldn’t agree more.

    I do think you need to disregard business fundamentals sometimes, but not at a scale where you’re raising and spending hundreds of millions of dollars, because you reach a point where people start to ask questions and [investors grow weary].

    Amazon is making a big push into on-demand delivery. How big a threat is it to Postmates?

    More here.

    —–

    New Fundings

    AppDynamics, a seven-year-old, San Francisco-based company whose software monitors the performance of business applications, has raised a fresh $83.4 million in funding as part of a round that’s targeting up to $150 million, shows a new SEC filing. Just last month, the company announced that former Adobe digital chief David Wadhwani had joined as CEO. According to CrunchBase, the company has raised $206 million to date in debt and equity, excluding its newest funding. We have more for you here. (H/T: EquityZen.)

    ClearSky Data, a 1.5-year-old, Boston-based company offering enterprise storage as a fully managed service, has raised $27 million in Series B funding led by Polaris Partners, with participation from Akamai Technologies and earlier backers General Catalyst Partners and Highland Capital Partners. The company has now raised $39 million altogether. TechCrunch has more here.

    Confer, a two-year-old, Boston-based cyberthreat prevention network, has raised $17 million in Series B funding led by Foundation Capital, with participation from earlier investors Matrix Partners and North Bridge Venture Partners. The company has now raised $25 million altogether. More here.

    Crinetics Pharmaceuticals, a seven-year-old, San Diego, Ca.-based therapeutics company focused on specialty endocrine disorders, has raised $40 million in Series A funding led by 5AM Ventures, Versant Ventures, and Vivo Capital. Xconomy has more here.

    DraftKings, the three-year-old, Boston-based online daily fantasy sports startup, is reportedly raising another $200 million in investor funding. The round would bring the company’s total  funding to about $630 million and peg its valuation at $2 billion. Boston Business Journal has more here.

    Handy, a three-year-old, New York-based platform that invites users to book household service providers, has raised $50 million in Series C funding led by new investor Fidelity Management, with participation from earlier backers TPG Ventures, General Catalyst Partners, Highland Capital Partners and Revolution Growth. The round brings the total invested in Handy (formerly known as Handybook) to just under $111 million. TechCrunch has more here.

    Huckletree, a 1.5-year-old, London-based community of coworking spaces, has raised £2.4 million ($3.7 million) in Series A funding, including from Felix Capital. More here.

    Nestpick, a 1.5-year-old, Berlin-based company aiming to digitize the entire apartment rental process and eliminate in-person viewings, has raised $11 million in Series A funding from Mangrove Capital Partners, Enern and Rocket Internet. TechCrunch has more here.

    Sighten, a three-year-old, San Francisco-based solar financing and supply chain software developer, has raised $3.5 million in Series A funding led by Obvious Ventures. More here.

    Vinaya, a two-year-old, U.K.-based startup whose first product is a range of high-end jewelry wearables called Altrius, has raised $3 million in seed funding led by Passion Capital, with participation from former Index partner Robin Klein, Playfair Capital, Bebo cofounder Michael Birch and several others. TechCrunch has more here.

    —–

    New Funds

    Pitango Venture Capital — which has invested in companies such as AppsFlyer and Taboola — has announced the first clos of its new Pitango Growth Fund, a vehicle that’s targeting $250 million. TechCrunch has more here.

    Startupbootcamp, which bills itself as Europe’s largest startup accelerator, has today announced the launch of its first accelerator programme in the U.S. It’s open for applications now and plans to host its first class in Miami, Fla.. The focus will be on so-called digital health. Tech.eu. has more here.

    —–

    IPOs

    Instructure, a seven-year-old, Salt Lake City, Ut.-based company that operates an online learning management system, announced terms for its IPO today. It plans to raise $75 million by offering 4.4 million shares at a price range of $16 to $18. Instructure has raised roughly $80 million from investors, including Bessemer Venture Partners and Insight Venture Partners. More here.

    —–

    Exits

    Big win alert: Bristol-Myers Squibb is acquiring the 10-year-old, Chapel Hill, N.C.-based cardiovascular disease drug developer Cardioxyl for up to $2 billion. According to CrunchBase, Cardioxyl had raised roughly $66 million over the years, including from New Enterprise Associates, OrbiMed, Aurora Funds and Osage University Partners. Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News has more here.

    The social media management company Sprinklr has acquired Booshaka, a three-year-old, Redwood City, Ca.-based company aiming to give businesses a better understanding of their audience.The financial terms of the deal were not disclosed. Booshaka had raised $3 million from SV Angel, PivotNorth CapitalFF Angel, Palantir co-founder Joe Lonsdale and others, according to CrunchBase. Founder ad CEO Erik Ober tells TechCrunch that his entire 10-person Booshaka team will be joining Sprinklr, which was founded six years ago in New York and has raised roughly $123 million to date.

    —–

    People

    This weekend in San Francisco’s ritzy Sea Cliff neighborhood, StrictlyVC spied Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff dressed like a pirate and gleefully handing out full-size Hershey bars to trick-or-treaters while Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” album blared from behind him. He stood underneath a canopy alongside several beefy guys who were also happily handing out chocolate bars and who we took to be bodyguards. Nice to see all of them out in front of Benioff’s home on a Halloween night.

    —–

    Jobs

    F-Prime Capital (the venture outfit affiliated with Fidelity Investments) is looking to hire an associate for its tech investment team. The job is in Boston.

    iNovia Capital is looking to hire a data-driven analyst for its early stage investment team. The job is in Waterloo, Ontario. To apply, write to antoine@inovia.vc

    —–

    Data

    As private valuations increase, public market returns are shrinking, shows a new study.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    How Uber and its peers turned us into horrible bosses.

    Amazon is giving up on Local, a daily deals coupon business that competed with services offered by Groupon.

    Apple is testing a way to goose sales: By offering $50 off to shoppers who buy a new iPhone and Apple Watch together.

    The war continues in the world of wearable fitness trackers. Jawbone — which makes fitness trackers, speakers and Bluetooth headsets — has filed a counterclaim against Fitbit in a patent infringement case brought by the latter company against its rival in September.

    Can GM beat Google to the self-driving car?

    —–

    Detours

    Diagnostic exam: Do you have math anxiety?

    Product reviews written by people going through breakups.

    The joy of bats.

    Driving mode. We’re all for it.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    Someone who must be very brilliant has made a remote-controlled R2-D2 mini fridge.

  • StrictlyVC: October 30, 2015

    Hi, everyone, we’re running off to a Halloween parade. Hope you have a frightfully good weekend, and we’ll see you back here on Monday!

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    The SEC is voting to finalize rules on Title III of the JOBS Act today.

    HTC’s latest financial results are out, and the struggling Taiwanese company is still struggling.

    LinkedIn reported its third quarter earnings yesterday, and they trounced analyst expectations.

    SolarCity also beat revenue expectations yesterday.

    —–

    Blind, An Anonymous Chat App for Employees, Raises Series A Funding from DCM

    Tired of being monitored by your company while wanting to dish with colleagues about said company? Or maybe you’re curious about what people with similar work experience are making at other companies. Blind, a two-year-old app founded in South Korea and newly available in the U.S., may be just the thing for you.

    Its big idea: bringing anonymity to the workplace so you can “share the real you” with other employees. If you happen to figure out what’s really happening in the upper echelons of the company, so much the better.

    Blind’s origins trace back to Naver, the South Korean Internet giant, which long ran a widely used employee forum but pulled the plug when employees began making less-than-flattering remarks about management. When a group of Naver employees left to form Blind, many Naver employees embraced the platform, followed by employees elsewhere.

    It’s been growing ever since, says Osuke Honda, a general partner at DCM, which led an unannounced Series A round of “single digit millions” in the company in May. Indeed, he says that another pivotal moment for Blind came late last year, when a senior Korean Air executive exploded in a rage after a flight attendant presented her peanuts in a bag instead of on a dish.

    More here.

    —–

    New Fundings

    Aira.IO, a year-old, La Jolla, Calif.-based visual interpreter for the blind, has raised $790,000 in seed funding from Lux Capital and ARCH Venture Partners. More here.

    Monclarity, a Burlingame, Ca.-based company that was cofounded by a neuropsychologist and makes games that it promises can train the brain under the brand Brainwell, has raised $5 million in seed funding led by Access Industries. More here.

    Elastic Path Software, a 15-year-old, Vancouver, Canada- based company that builds commerce software for e-tailers, has raised $7.6 million from Yaletown Venture Partners and BDC Venture Capital. More here.

    Filld, a months-old, Palo Alto, Ca.-based on-demand fuel delivery startup, has raised $3.25 million in funding from Lightspeed Venture Partners and Javelin Ventures Partners. More here.

    MabSpace Biosciences, a seven-year-old, Suzhou, China-based developer of antibody-based therapeutics designed to treat cancer, has raised $15 million in Series A funding from Lilly Asia Ventures. China Money Network has more here.

    TrendKite, a three-year-old, Austin, Tex.-based public relations analytics company, has raised $10.7 million in Series C funding led by Noro-Moseley Partners, with participation from earlier backers Battery Ventures, Silverton Partners and Mercury Fund. More here.

    —–

    New Funds

    Altos Ventures is looking to raise up to $110 million for its second Korea-focused venture capital fund, according to an SEC filing that states the first sale has yet to occur.

    BPI France has launched a $100 million fund focused on tourism and leisure. FinSMEs has more here.

    Frazier Healthcare Partners, which just closed a $262 million eighth fund, is raising a separate growth buyout fund, shows an SEC filing that doesn’t list a target. (If you missed it, we talked earlier this week with the firm about its fundraising adventures.)<

    Green Visor Capital, a San Francisco-based financial-services-focused venture firm, is looking to raise $200 million for its second fund, shows an SEC filing that states the first sale has yet to occur.

    U.S. Venture Partners has raised $281.3 million for its eleventh fund, shows an SEC filing. The firm officially kicked off fundraising in September of last year.

    —–

    Exits

    Mainstream, a three-year-old content management and delivery platform for video content creators, is being acquired by Cisco for undisclosed terms (though one of Mainstream’s investors, DCM, says the deal is producing a 14x return on its investment). Altogether, Mainstream had raised $8.75 million, including from the satellite company Sky, Menlo Ventures and Luminari Capital. Variety has more here.

    The Seattle-based online home services platform Porch.com has acquired Fountain, a service that connects Internet users with doctors, lawyers, mechanics, tech support and other experts through video chats, texts and annotated photos. Fountain was co-founded by Aaron Patzer, who’d earlier founded Mint.com. Terms of the deal aren’t being disclosed. Fountain had raised $4 million in funding from Shasta Ventures and First Round Capital. TechCrunch has the story here.

    Almost two weeks after it was outbid by another firm, Woburn, Ma.-based chip maker Skyworks Solutions has struck a deal to acquire California rival PMC-Sierra for $2.27 billion in cash. Boston Business Journal has more here.

    —–

    People

    The founder of Yahoo-acquired Summly, Nick D’Aloisio, has left the company to focus on his philosophy and computer science schoolwork at Oxford.

    Josh Silverman has rejoined venture capital firm Greylock Partners as an EIR, a post he also took up in 2011. Silverman has spent the past several years with American Express as president of consumer products and services.

    The European Parliament voted Thursday to protect NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden from extradition to the United States.

    Jessica Verrilli, a longtime member of Twitter’s corporate development team who left for Google Ventures in May, is headed back to Twitter for a senior role.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    Alphabet’s Google unit is trying to get back into China.

    —–

    Detours

    “Marty was always my best friend”: Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s love story.

    Study: Self-driving cars crash five times as much as regular ones.

    Quiz: Could you cut it as an art-buying billionaire?

    The man bun and comb-over are big already, and Google predicts they’ll only get bigger.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    Good things to have for long plane rides.

  • Blind, An Anonymous Chat App for Employees, Raises Series A Funding from DCM

    Screen Shot 2015-10-30 at 8.34.11 AMTired of being monitored by your company while wanting to dish with colleagues about said company? Or maybe you’re curious about what people with similar work experience are making at other companies? Blind, a two-year-old app founded in South Korea and newly available in the U.S., may be just the thing for you.

    Its big idea: bringing anonymity to the workplace so you can “share the real you” with other employees. If you happen to figure out what’s really happening in the upper echelons of the company, so much the better.

    Blind’s origins trace back to Naver, the South Korean Internet giant, which long ran a widely used employee forum but pulled the plug when employees began making less-than-flattering remarks about management. When a group of Naver employees left to form Blind, many Naver employees embraced the platform, followed by employees elsewhere.

    It’s been growing ever since, says Osuke Honda, a general partner at DCM, which led an unannounced Series A round of “single digit millions” in the company in May. Indeed, he says that another pivotal moment for Blind came late last year, when a senior Korean Air executive exploded in a rage after a flight attendant presented her peanuts in a bag instead of on a dish.

    More here.

  • StrictlyVC: October 29, 2015

    Hi, happy Thursday, everyone.:)

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    PayPal stumbled yesterday in its first earnings call since splitting from eBay.

    GoPro also took a dive yesterday after releasing Q3 financials that disappointed street expectations.

    Meanwhile, Yelp disclosed its third quarter earnings, too, and they look far better than the previous quarter.

    —–

    Pay to Play: How Investors Get Burned in a Downturn

    Earlier this year, the law firm Fenwick & West published a report analyzing the financing terms of 37 U.S.-based venture-backed companies that raised money at valuations of $1 billion or more in the 12-month period ending March 31.

    The report’s headline-grabbing conclusionwas that in all cases, the investors had received significant downside protection in case the companies’ value declines. (Called a liquidation preference, the companies’ later-stage investors basically received the right to get paid ahead of other investors, as well as the companies’ management teams and employees.)

    The findings were a revelation, but they didn’t provide a complete picture of what could happen in a downturn. In fact, there’s a giant hitch the report did not touch on, and that’s pay-to-play provisions, which became routine during the dot com bust of 15 years ago and could well become commonplace again if things head south.

    “VCs, especially people who’ve been in the business a long time, understand them,” says attorney Barry Kramer, who authored the Fenwick & West report and more recently wrote on Mediumabout pay-to-play provisions. “It’s part of their calculation. I’m not sure that a good chunk of newer investors, whether non-traditional or because they’re just younger or whatever, have this scenario in mind.”

    They should.

    More here.

    —–

    New Fundings

    Brandwatch, an eight-year-old, Brighton, U.K.-based social media monitoring firm that says it crawls more than 80 million sites, has raised $33 million in Series C funding led by Partech Ventures, with participation from earlier investors Highland Capital Partners Europe and Nauta Capital. TechCrunch has more here.

    Digital Currency Group, an eight-month-old, New York-based holding firm that was created by SecondMarket founder Barry Silbert and focuses on investing and developing businesses that deal in bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, has raised an undisclosed amount of funding from some big U.S. financial names, including Bain Capital Ventures, MasterCard, New York Life Insurance Company, and CIBC. Reuters has more here.

    Enlitic, a year-old, San Francisco-based company applying machine learning to X-rays, MRIs and other medical images to radiologists, has raised $10 million in Series B funding led by Capitol Health Limited, an Australian radiology company that operates imaging centers in Australia and some Asian markets. Enlitic previously raised $5 million in Series A funding from Amplify PartnersData Collective, and individual investors. Venture Capital Dispatch has the story here.

    Gobble, a four-year-old, Palo Alto, Ca.-based company that delivers weekly “dinner kits” — meals that can be prepared in 10 minutes or fewer, using just one pan — has raised $10.75 million in Series A funding led by Trinity Ventures, with participation from Andreessen Horowitz, Fenox VCInitialized Capital and Trinity Ventures entrepreneur-in-residence Anjula Acharia-Bath. More here.

    Qvella, a six-year-old, Toronto-based molecular diagnostics company, has raised $20 million in Series A financing co-led by RA Capital Management and Whitecap Venture Partners, with participation from Hatteras Venture Partners and Sands Capital Ventures. More here.

    Two Bit Circus, a three-year-old, L.A.-based company that produces interactive, experiential tech exhibits, has raised $6.5 million in funding co-led by Techstars Ventures and Foundry Group. Venture Capital Dispatch has more here.

    —–

    New Funds

    Frazier Healthcare Partners, a 24-year-old healthcare-focused venture firm with offices in both Menlo Park, Ca., and Seattle, has raised $262 million for its eighth fund. The vehicle is substantially smaller than its predecessor fund, a $375 million pool raised in 2013. We’ve talked with longtime general partner Jamie Topper about why that is. More here.

    —–

    People

    A new ruling clears the way for a trial of Facebook shareholder Ernesto Espinoza’s allegations that Facebook allowed directors to award themselves excessive pay in 2013, when non-employee directors received an average of $461,000 in stock. That’s as much as 43 percent more than its industry peers, says Espinoza’s complaint. Bloomberg has the story here.

    Nirav Tolia, co-founder and CEO of the neighborhood social networking site Nextdoor.com, met with a group of activists in Oakland, Ca., yesterday to discuss concerns about racial profiling on the website; he told them that Nextdoor plans to add a “racial profiling button” to allow users to flag inappropriate posts. East Bay Express has more here.

    Jon Winkelried, who previously served as president and co-chief operating officer of Goldman Sachs, has been named Co-CEO of TPG Holdings, where he’ll work alongside TPG cofounder and current CEO Jim Coulter. David Bonderman, who co-founded TPG with Coulter, will continue on as chairman of TPG. The Wall Street Journal has more here.

    —–

    Jobs

    Redpoint Ventures is looking to hire a data-driven analyst for its early-stage investing team. The job is in both San Francisco and Menlo Park, Ca. To apply, write to talent@redpoint.com.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    IT is using wireless signals to identify people through walls.

    Amazon is planning to release its own QVC-like shopping channel, and purchases can be done right from the screen. More here.

    An interesting new virtual reality startup is trying to bring professional decorating to the masses. More here.

    —–

    Det0urs

    Expectant dad photographer.

    How the 1 percent says, “Boo!”

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    Frappula, the Halloween drink of your nightmares (if you are scared of chocolate sauce and raspberry syrup).

  • Pay to Play: How Investors Get Burned in a Downturn

    burnt toastEarlier this year, the law firm Fenwick & West published a report analyzing the financing terms of 37 U.S.-based venture-backed companies that raised money at valuations of $1 billion or more in the 12-month period ending March 31.

    The report’s headline-grabbing conclusion was that in all cases, the investors had received significant downside protection in case the companies’ value declines. (Called a liquidation preference, the companies’ later-stage investors basically received the right to get paid ahead of other investors, as well as the companies’ management teams and employees.)

    The findings were a revelation, but they didn’t provide a complete picture of what could happen in a downturn. In fact, there’s a giant hitch the report did not touch on, and that’s pay-to-play provisions, which became routine during the dot com bust of 15 years ago and could well become commonplace again if things head south.

    “VCs, especially people who’ve been in the business a long time, understand them,” says attorney Barry Kramer, who authored the Fenwick & West report and more recently wrote on Medium about pay-to-play provisions. “It’s part of their calculation. I’m not sure that a good chunk of newer investors, whether non-traditional or because they’re just younger or whatever, have this scenario in mind.”

    They should.

    More here.

  • StrictlyVC: October 28, 2015

    Hi, everyone! Apologies for the insanely late send; we’ve been on back-to-back calls since earlier this morning.

    Hope you’re having a great Wednesday.:)

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    The tiny vials used by Theranos to collect finger-pricked blood has been declared by the FDA as an “uncleared medical device” that the company was shipping across state lines, reports the WSJ.

    Apple turned in another blockbuster quarter yesterday, fueled by sales of the iPhone.

    Twitter revealed yesterday that it’s user base still isn’t growing.

    —–

    Klarna, a Swedish Unicorn, is Coming to the U.S. with Big Ambitions to Take on Its U.S. Peers

    If you live in the U.S., you might not be terribly familiar with Klarna, a 10-year-old Stockholm-based company that provides payment services for online storefronts in a somewhat unique way — by “separating the buying from the selling,” as company cofounder and CEO Sebastian Siemiatkowski explains it.

    Put simply, you visit a site powered by Klarna, input only your email and zip code, and presto, your item is purchased. You then have 30 days to pay back Klarna, using whatever payment method you like. The big idea is to increase conversion rates, and whether or not they realize it, 35 million consumers have now used Klarna across the sites of 50,000 merchants, who understandably love the service. (The fewer keystrokes required, the higher the chance a purchase will be made, especially with a smartphone.)

    Of course, what’s happening behind the scenes is a sophisticated fraud management operation, one that counts Sequoia’s Michael Moritz as a board member and which was most recently valued at $2.25 billion. Klarna plans to compete more aggressively in the U.S., too. Over the past year, it has set up offices in New York and Columbus, Ohio. Now it’s searching for space in San Francisco, where it eventually expects to employ up to 30 people to help it strike relationships with companies big and small.

    Over coffee earlier this week, we talked with Siemiatkowski about Klarna’s roadmap and what he thinks of one competitor in particular: four-year-old Stripe, whose valuation is twice that of Klarna and which now has its sights on the Nordic countries where Klarna has become king. (Stripe also happens to be backed by Sequoia.) Our chat has been edited for length.

    Much more here.

    —–

    New Fundings

    Alteryx, which offers an analytics tool aimed at business users, announced an $85 million round today led by Iconiq Capital and Insight Venture Partners, with participation from Meritech Capital Partners. The company has now raised $163 million altogether. TechCrunch has more here.

    APL Software, a two-month-old, San Jose, Ca.-based parallel computing company, has raised $5.2 million in funding from Accomplice, Wing Venture Capital and company co-founder Cheng Wu, who was previously head of tech strategy at Ericcson. More here.

    Commerce Signals, a three-year-old, Palo Alto, Ca.-based data collaboration startup for serving retailers, mobile operators, banks and payment networks, has raised $4 million in Series A funding led by OpenAir Equity PartnersMore here.

    Desktop Metal, a months-old, Cambridge, Ma.-based 3D printing startup that works with metal, has raised $14 million in funding from New Enterprise Associates, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, Lux Capital and Bolt. Desktop Metal was founded by Ric Fulop, the founder of A123 Systems and former general partner with North Bridge Venture Partners. Xconomy has more here.

    Envelop VR, a year-old Bellevue, Wa.-based company creating enterprise and productivity software that allows businesses and consumers to create, work and play in a virtual reality environment, has raised $4 million in Series A funding led by Madrona Venture Group. More here.

    KeepTruckin, a two-year-old, San Francisco-based company whose apps and hardware enable truck drivers to electronically log all of their miles and hours worked, has raised $8 million in Series A funding led by Index Ventures, with participation from Google Ventures, which had previously led the company’s $2.3 million seed round. More here.

    Marqeta, a five-year-old, Emeryville, Ca.-based developer and provider of payment processing technologies, has raised $25 million in new funding from IA Capital, CommerzVentures, and entrepreneur Max Levchin. Earlier backers 83North, Granite Ventures, and Commerce Ventures also joined the round.TechCrunch has more here.

    Nuritas, a 1.5-year-old, Dublin, Ireland-based therapeutics discovery startup that leverages artificial intelligence, has raised $3.2 million in new funding led by the Singapore-based firm New Protein Capital, with participation from entrepreneur-investor Ali Partovi.

    Paddle8, a four-year-old, New York-based secondary marketplace for art and luxury collectibles, has raised $34 million in Series C funding from Mousse Partners, art dealer David Zwirner, Sony Music Entertainment Chairman Edgar Berger and Working Title Films Co-Chairman Eric Fellner. The company has now raised $51 million altogether, shows CrunchBase. More here.

    Petnet, a three-year-old, L.A.-based company connected pet device company, has raised $4 million in funding from Black River Ventures, Aspiration Growth, iRobot Ventures and the Amazon Alexa Fund. More here.

    SmartZyme, a two-year-old, New York and Israel-based company building a platform for protein design, has raised $4 million in funding led by OrbiMedMore here.

    Spigit, a nine-year-old, San Francisco-based company focused on crowdsourcing software for enterprises, has raised $14 million in new funding led by earlier backer Investor Growth Capital. More here.

    Taris Biomedical, a seven-year-old, Lexington, Ma.-based developer of treatments for urologic diseases, has raised $32 million in funding led by Flagship Ventures, with participation from RA Capital Management and earlier backer Polaris Venture Partners. More here.

    Turnstone Biologics, a new Vancouver-based biotechnology company focused on developing treatments for cancer, has raised $11.3 million in Series A funding led by Versant Ventures. More here.

    Zype, a two-year-old, New York-based cloud platform for video publishing and distribution, has raised $1.6 million in seed funding from Revel PartnersEntrepreneurs Investment Fund, and numerous individual investors including former Tumblr president John Maloney. TechCrunch has more here.

    —–

    Exits

    IBM announced this morning it’s acquiring The Weather Company, the parent company to the The Weather Channel, as well as the company’s B2B, mobile and web properties. TechCrunch has more here.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    You no longer have to dread the day that a game developer shuts off its servers and renders your favorite title unplayable. More from Engadget here.

    —–

    Detours

    How to detect lies with a storytelling technique.

    A Japanese study claims to have found the brain-scan imprint of misogynistic views.

    Computer scientists in Germany and California have found a way to manipulate videos to change a person’s facial expressions in real time.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    Tom Ford’s Black Orchid. Manly cologne, in a manly bottle. For men.

  • Swedish Payments Unicorn Klarna Hits the U.S. to Take On Its American Rivals

    klarna-sebastian-ceoIf you live in the U.S., you might not be terribly familiar with Klarna, a 10-year-old Stockholm-based company that provides payment services for online storefronts in a somewhat unique way — by “separating the buying from the selling,” as company cofounder and CEO Sebastian Siemiatkowski explains it.

    Put simply, you visit a site powered by Klarna, input only your email and zip code, and presto, your item is purchased. You then have 30 days to pay back Klarna, using whatever payment method you like. The big idea is to increase conversion rates, and whether or not they realize it, 35 million consumers have now used Klarna across the sites of 50,000 merchants, who understandably love the service. (The fewer keystrokes required, the higher the chance a purchase will be made, especially with a smartphone.)

    Of course, what’s happening behind the scenes is a sophisticated fraud management operation, one that counts Sequoia’s Michael Moritz as a board member and which was most recently valued at $2.25 billion. Klarna plans to compete more aggressively in the U.S., too. Over the past year, it has set up offices in New York and Columbus, Ohio. Now it’s searching for space in San Francisco, where it eventually expects to employ up to 30 people to help it strike relationships with companies big and small.

    Over coffee earlier this week, we talked with Siemiatkowski about Klarna’s roadmap and what he thinks of one competitor in particular: four-year-old Stripe, whose valuation is twice that of Klarna and which now has its sights on the Nordic countries where Klarna has become king. (Stripe also happens to be backed by Sequoia.) Our chat has been edited for length.

    Much more here.

  • StrictlyVC: October 27, 2015

    Hi, everyone, happy Tuesday!

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    The European Union just rejected legal amendments that would firmly establish and protect the concept of net neutrality in Europe.

    Skype, Spotify, and others have created European Tech Alliance, a lobbying group designed to influence policy-making; it’s being spearheaded by Skype co-founder Niklas Zennström.

    —–

    Construction App Fieldwire Raises $5.5 Million Led by Formation 8

    Fieldwire, a San Francisco-based mobile and web platform designed to make collaboration on construction projects more efficient, has raised $5.5 million in fresh funding led by Formation 8. Other participants in the round included Trinity Ventures and earlier backers Bloomberg Beta and AngelPad, the investment fund and accelerator where the company first gained investors’ attention in the fall of 2013.

    Including earlier seed funding, the company has now raised $6.6 million altogether.Because Fieldwire is part of an increasingly crowded, if nascent, group of startups that are zeroing in on the same market, we decided to talk last week with cofounder Yves Frinault to learn more. Our chat has been edited for length.

    One of your better-known competitors is PlanGrid. How do your companies differ?

    At our core, we’re a task management platform, working on tasks and collaboration, including with the foreman, the subcontractors, and labor; PlanGrid is more focused on digitizing and storing blueprints and construction documents. We’re more like Asana for construction; they’re more like Box. It’s tasks versus files.

    How big is Fieldwire at this point?

    We were five people. We’ve doubled in the last four months to meet demand, but we could have been a lot more; we believe in dense, focused teams. As for [our clients], there are currently 35,000 projects on the platform [owned by] 1,000 companies.

    So these are big clients.

    When you operate a typical SaaS company, you usually start in mid-market and go up market. In construction, it’s different. The top line, half-a-billion-dollar companies are the ones driving the projects, so we found ourselves working with those guys — the large general contractors and specialty contractors — right away.

    More here.

    —–

    New Fundings

    ArtLifting, an online art marketplace for homeless, disabled and other disadvantaged people to sell their artwork, has raised $1.1 million in seed funding from Toms Shoes founder Blake Mycoskie, angel investor Joanne Wilson, author and entrepreneur Eric Ries, the social impact accelerator Tumml, and others.

    Cato Networks, a months-old, Tel Aviv, Israel-based network security company co-founded by Shlomo Kramer, who famously cofounded Check Point Software and founded Imperva, has raised $20 million in Series A funding led by Aspect Ventures and  U.S. Venture Partners. The company’s software will be available next year; it’s currently accepting beta customers. More here.

    Convoy, a year-old, Seattle-based startup whose platform aims to make it easy for shippers to quickly connect with nearby trucking companies to book jobs, has raised $2.5 million in seed funding from a long list of investors, including Bezos Expeditions, Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff, Omidyar Technology Ventures, KKR CEO Henry Kravis, entrepreneur-investors Hadi and Ali Partovi, Expedia CEO Dara Khosrowshahi, and Dropbox CEO Drew Houston. TechCrunch has more here.

    DirectScale, a five-month-old, Provo, Ut.-based company that makes cloud-based software for the direct sales industry, has raised $4 million in Series A funding from Kickstart Seed Fund and publicly traded NetSuite. More here.

    SourceClear, a two-year-old, Seattle-based company whose software helps development teams to visualize vulnerabilities across all their projects in real time, has raised $10 million in funding from Index Ventures and Storm Ventures. More here.

    Sportradar, a 12-year-old, St. Gallen, Switzerland-based sports data company, has raised $44 million (€40 million) in new funding led by Revolution Growth, with participation from Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban and basketball great Michael Jordan. TechCrunch has more here.

    Zebit, a four-year-old, London-based company that provides zero-interest credit to shoppers who work but don’t yet have access to traditional credit cards, has raised $10 million in Series A funding led by Crosslink Capital, with participation from Correlation Ventures, Leapfrog Ventures and Wildcat Venture Partners.

    —–

    New Funds

    VC Brad Harrison is planning to launch a $40 million Australian division of his seven-year-old, New York-based seed stage venture firm Scout Ventures, reports Financial Review. Harrison was formerly a director of media strategy and develoment at AOL. More here.

    Singapore state-fund Temasek Holdings’ wholly owned investment arm –Vertex Venture Holdings – has garnered commitments of more than $200 million for its third China fund, a top executive with the firm tells DealStreetAsia. More here.

    —–

    Exits

    Cisco is acquiring Lancope, a 15-year-old, Alpharetta, Ga.-based company that detects malicious activity on corporate networks. The purchase price is $452.5 million in cash and equity, with Lancope’s team becoming part of the Cisco Security Business Group. Over the years, Lancope had raised $24.6 million from investors shows CrunchBase, including Canaan Partners, GMG Capital, HIG Partners and Council Ventures. TechCrunch has more here.

    —–

    People

    DreamWorks Animation CEO Jeffrey Katzenberg is crediting Tesla’s Elon Musk with saving his life following a recent car crash.

    —–

    Data

    In the past nine months, angel investors and venture capitalists have poured an unprecedented amount of money into Indian startups. Between January and September, $7.3 billion was invested across 639 deals. YourStory has much more here.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    More bad news for Theranos; Over the last year, multiple news outlets have reported that Theranos earns a portion its income from large pharmaceutical companies Pfizer and GlaxoSmithKline. But according to representatives from both companies who spoke to the Financial Times, that information is incorrect. “I cannot find any evidence that we’ve done business with them in recent years,” a spokesperson for GSK tells the outlet.

    At the payments company Square, quarterly losses are mounting and sales growth is slowing, it revealed in an amended SEC filing yesterday. (The filing also disclosed that Vinod Khosla, who joined the board in 2011, has stepped down.)

    Slack, the workplace chat tool, has just reached a new milestone, according to CEO Stewart Butterfield: recently, one million users signed into the service at the same time.

    —–

    Detours

    How the world’s 50 best restaurants are chosen.

    The best time to schedule a job interview.

    Why some U.K. firms are recruiting nameless applicants.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    Slaughterhouse Beach House. (You have to take the virtual tour.)

     


StrictlyVC on Twitter