Showing posts with label startup capital. Show all posts
Showing posts with label startup capital. Show all posts

Thursday, November 1, 2018

Funding for Startups in the D.C. Area Reached $50 Million in October

Funding Roundup: D.C.-Area Startups Raised $50M in October

Funding for Startups

By Kieran McQuilkin - October 31, 2018
Topic: Funding for Startups

October was another quiet month volume-wise for DMV term sheets, with just one high-value deal moving big money into the local startup scene and several around $4 million and $5 million. At least 11 D.C. metro-area startups (including Baltimore) raised a combined $50 million in funding, led by an eight-figure venture round by Bethesda data analytics company Aledade.

The biggest tech funding deal came from D.C.-based sales software company Afiniti, which quietly raised $130 million in a Series D round, valuing it at $1.6 billion and making it the metro area’s newest unicorn. Since it was founded in 2016, it aged out of our startup roundup, but was a notable capital infusion nonetheless.

A few investment groups got in on the action as well, with the opening of a $300 million fund for a District-based venture capital firm and the closing of a Vienna firm’s first outside fund of $250 million.

FYI, we cover startup funding news in the DC Inno Beat newsletter every weekday. Stay on top of who’s getting funded by signing up here. See you in the inbox.

Below are the 11 local startups that raised capital in October.

Aledade, a Bethesda-based data analytics software company that helps doctors cut costs on readmissions, raised $23 million in new venture funding. Palo Alto-based Meritech Capital Partners led the round, contributing $15 million. The new money is a continuation of a prior round, and it adds to a $23 million round late last year.

On-demand technology repair company Fixt hauled in $6.5 million in Series A funding. The round was led by San Francisco-based Precursor Ventures and U.S. Cellular, with participation from Naples Technology Ventures and additional existing investors. The Baltimore-based startup previously raised a $1.4 million seed round in early 2016.

Columbia, Md.-based Zentail, which helps small retailers manage their e-commerce operations across websites like Amazon and eBay, raised $5 million. Initialized Capital led the Series A round for the 3-year-old startup, with participation from FundersClub. It has previously raised $1.2 million in seed funding.

Baltimore startup Hunt a Killer, which sells subscription boxes with mystery puzzles is seeking up to $5 million in venture capital to support customer growth and new products. It expects to have 50,000 customers by yearend. Last month, the company also announced a long-term $8 million funding deal from Clearbanc.

UMB-born biotech startup Breethe has raised at least $3.5 million of a $5 million funding round toward its quest to create artificial lungs. It spun out of the university in 2014 and is backed by more than $5 million in previous funding, including a $3 million round reported in December last year.

D.C.-based nonprofit edtech startup CommonLit is continuing its blockbuster growth with a $3.5 million grant from Google. In June this year, CommonLit nabbed $4 million in funding from backers including AT&T, Teach for America, the EPIC Foundation, Arthur Rock Foundation and others.

Bethesda-based cybersecurity startup Syncurity closed a $2 million round of investment. The new funding was led by the Maryland Technological Development Corporation, better known as TEDCO, which has made a variety of startup investments. Syncurity, founded by JP Bourget in 2014, raised an undisclosed seed round in 2014 and $380,000 in 2016.

Byte Back, a nonprofit that offers technology training and job placement to underserved populations in the D.C. area, is expanding its services to Baltimore with a $775,000 grant from TD Bank. The grant came as part of the inaugural TD Ready Challenge, which this year focused on financial security and awarded the same total to 10 organizations in the U.S. and Canada.

D.C.-based voice app creator XAPP Media raised at least $750,000 from seven investors in a maximum $2 million equity round, according to SEC filings. The company has launched and manages over 1,000 apps on Amazon Alexa, Google Assistant and Microsoft’s Catana. It’s no stranger to fundraising, having hauled in $11.3 million in capital since 2014, according to a Crunchbase tally.

Maryland-based AI startup RedShred was awarded a $745,000 Small Business Innovation Research Phase 2 grant from the National Science Foundation. The grant will be provided over 18 months for development and commercialization of its technology, which analyzes and produces summaries of lengthy proposal documents for government contractors, grant researchers and universities. The company previously was awarded a $225,000 Phase 1 SBIR grant in 2016.

David Adler, founder and CEO of event-planning platform BizBash Media, along with his company and family invested over $500,000 in D.C.-based startup Goodshuffle. Goodshuffle launched four years ago and makes a software tool designed for event rental, production and entertainment companies to manage inventory, track sales and streamline operations.

A pair of investment companies made moves in October as well:

D.C. venture capital firm Updata Partners opened a $300 million raise for its latest fund. The fund, which targets later-stage companies and provides growth funding, has invested in several D.C.-area startups, including real estate platform Homesnap and content creation platform Storyblocks. According to its website, the VC firm has raised $750M in committed capital and invested in more than 40 companies.

Vienna-based growth equity firm Aldrich Capital Partners closed on its first outside fund, raking in $256 million. The investment company had previously used a self-funded $50M to invest in several startups, including Cofense, which sold for $400 million this year. Aldrich partners said the fund will be aimed at companies in healthcare IT, fintech and software that are still led by their founders and haven’t yet raised institutional funding.

Source: https://www.americaninno.com/dc/funding-dc/funding-roundup-d-c-area-startups-raised-50m-in-october/

Monday, October 29, 2018

Crypto Startups Welcomed by Boost VC

Boost VC Issues Call for Crypto Startups

Crypto Startups

From CCN.com Oct 29, 2018

Technology startup accelerator Boost VC has announced that it is accepting applications from crypto startups to join Tribe 12, its latest accelerator program cohort. Since 2012, Boost VC has graduated several cohorts with more than 75 crypto-related projects including prominent blockchain projects like Etherscan, Aragon, and MyCrypto.

According to the announcement, which appeared in a Medium post, the company is seeking to invest in blockchain startups that provide solutions for cross chain functionality, front end blockchain solutions, crypto team building and maintenance, and general blockchain scaling.

‘Missing Puzzle Pieces’
Boost VC describes its investment focus for Tribe 12 as an attempt to fill in missing pieces in the blockchain and crypto adoption puzzle from an infrastructure point of view. While investors like Goldman Sachs continue to grab headlines with eye-catching investments in startups focused on crypto custody and trading solutions, Boost VC is taking its investment from a wider perspective, seeking out startups that can build nuts-and-bolts blockchain solutions such as cross-chain navigation interfaces and management solutions for the peculiar challenge of distributed crypto teams.

Applications are welcomed from startups interested in creating decentralised frameworks for commerce, communication and government similar to ConsenSys, but operating on other non-Ethereum blockchains. According to Boost VC, the goal is to explore studio builder models for quick iterations on bringing crypto mainstream. Boost VC is also looking for projects focused on the creation and management of crypto teams, which come with the unique and unprecedented challenge of being almost entirely remote, contractor-heavy instead of employee-based, and having the near-instant liquidity offered by crypto payments, which creates a different incentive model from traditional startups.

In addition, projects that create cross-chain interfaces outside of custody, exchange and wallet solutions are particularly prized for investment. This is because Boost VC sees such projects as essentially land grabs offering the opportunity to build a blockchain interaction utility that can be recreated across the other top 5 – 10 blockchain networks.

The company also says it is looking for the “Coinbase for other blockchains/dapps” as well as a possible solution for legal gambling that takes advantage of differing regulatory environments across jurisdictions. Country-specific custody solutions and security trading solutions are also mentioned.

An excerpt from the announcement reads:

“Regulatory arbitrage plays. We invest globally. Therefore we will look at teams using certain jurisdictions to their advantage. Areas of legal gambling. Custody designed for specific countries. Trading securities.”

Projects working on such solutions are encouraged to apply to Boost VC’s Tribe 12 accelerator batch.
Source: https://www.ccn.com/boost-vc-issues-call-for-crypto-startups/


Wednesday, October 10, 2018

ICO-Funded Startups Getting a Closer Look From The SEC

SEC tightens the noose on ICO-funded startups

From DecryptMedia.com by Daniel Roberts October 10, 2018

Hundreds of startups that did token sales are finding out they’re in violation of securities law— including many that were sure they did it the right way.

During the past few months, the Securities and Exchange Commission has significantly widened its crackdown on certain initial coin offerings, putting hundreds of cryptocurrency startups at risk.

The SEC sent out a slew of initial information-seeking subpoenas at the start of 2018. Now the agency has returned to many of those companies, and subpoenaed many more—focusing on those that failed to properly ensure they sold their token exclusively to accredited investors.

The agency is exerting pressure on many of those companies to settle their cases. In response, dozens of companies have quietly agreed to refund investor money and pay a fine. But many startups that have been subpoenaed say they are left in the dark struggling to satisfy the SEC’s demands, and are uncertain of how others are handling it, according to conversations with more than 15 industry sources as part of a joint investigation by Yahoo Finance and Decrypt.

The sources, many of whom are employees of companies that were subpoenaed by the SEC or are attorneys for those companies, requested anonymity, because the SEC restricts them from discussing the matter.

ICO funding, which began in 2014, exploded in popularity last year as an alternative method to fund a cryptocurrency startup, rather than the traditional venture capital route. In an ICO, a startup sells its own digital token, typically for later use in the ecosystem the startup plans to build; buyers pay for the token in the cryptocurrencies bitcoin or ether. In the majority of cases, companies that do ICOs have not yet launched any product. Think of an ICO as buying chips for use in a casino that hasn’t been built yet.

It is hard to say precisely how many ICOs occurred during the past four years. ICO Alert says it has tracked more than 5,000 but publicly displays only 3,400 “legitimate” ones. CoinDesk, a leading bitcoin trade publication, lists only 800 in the past two years. More than $20 billion has been raised in ICOs to date, but the ICO boom peaked in January 2018. Concerns over the legality of token sales have had a chilling effect.

The core issue now for every company that did an ICO: Was its “token” a security? And if it was, did the company register its offering with the SEC, or ensure that it qualified for an exemption?

SEC sees most ICOs as securities offerings—and companies failed to comply

Many of the companies that did ICOs called their offering something else, such as a “utility token” or a “SAFT” (Simple Agreement for Future Tokens, an ICO method in which investors buy a reservation for tokens yet to be launched), but the SEC does not care about those labels. It weighs each ICO on a case-by-case basis.

In July 2017, the SEC announced that it viewed the tokens offered by The DAO, an ICO that raised more than $150 million in 2016, as securities. Then, at a Senate hearing in February, SEC Chairman Jay Clayton said, “I believe every ICO I’ve seen is a security.”

Capital raising through blockchain requires compliance with federal securities laws https://t.co/IjOxjoVdfK  — SEC Enforcement (@SEC_Enforcement) July 25, 2017

William Hinman, the SEC’s director of corporation finance, provided further clarity in June at Yahoo Finance’s All Markets Summit when he said ether does not appear to be a security, but suggested that most ICOs are securities offerings, and that, “calling the transaction an initial coin offering, or ‘ICO,’ or a sale of a ‘token,’ will not take it out of the purview of the U.S. securities laws.”

Any U.S. company offering a security must register its offering with the SEC, or qualify for an exemption. Amid the ICO boom, virtually none have registered a security offering. Thus, they must meet an exemption. The SEC exemptions include selling only to investors outside the U.S., or selling only to accredited investors, which are individuals with income higher than $200,000 in each of the past two years or a minimum net worth of $1 million.

Ensuring that investors are fully accredited requires, as the SEC spells out plainly, “reviewing documentation, such as W-2s, tax returns, bank and brokerage statements, credit reports and the like.” In other words, it involves a lot more than just checking a box.

Many companies that thought they did properly limit their ICO to accredited investors are now finding out that in the eyes of the SEC, they didn’t.

Robert Cohen, chief of the cyber unit in the SEC’s enforcement division, likens it to a spectrum. When the SEC calls up a company that did an ICO and asks how the company limited its ICO to certain investors, “Some companies tell us the name of the law firm that advised them, explain the know-your-customer procedures they followed, and show us an investor list that is limited to accredited investors,” he says. “At the other end of the spectrum, some point to a website statement about limiting the ICO to some investors, and possibly checkboxes, and that’s it.”

“The law was pretty clear”

Some of the people particularly surprised to be in trouble are those who did their ICO as a SAFT, a designation that was intended specifically to be more compliant with securities law.

But some onlookers have little sympathy. Cardozo Law School professor Aaron Wright, who co-authored a paper that questioned the legality of the SAFT model, says, “There could have been other ways they could have structured it, like selling a digital good to people who actually wanted to use it, instead of predominately to speculative investors. They could have talked to the SEC first. I think the law was pretty clear that if you sell something to an investor, it’s likely a security—folks just wanted to engage in token sales, so they just kind of flouted it.”

In December 2017, the SEC shut down the $15 million ICO of a startup called Munchee and forced the company to refund the buyers. Munchee had advertised that its token would go up in value; promises of financial returns are a red flag for the SEC.

In January 2018, the SEC shut down the ICO of AriseBank, which had raised $600 million of a $1 billion goal, for falsely stating it had bought an FDIC-insured bank. In April 2018, the SEC shut down the $32 million ICO of Centra, which had been promoted by boxer Floyd Mayweather and rapper DJ Khaled, for using “misleading marketing” and “paid celebrities” to make false claims. Last month, the SEC charged TokenLot, which called itself an “ICO Superstore,” with being an unregistered broker-dealer, and charged Crypto Asset Management (CAM) with false marketing and being an unregistered investment company.

Those are just some examples that the SEC announced publicly.

Behind closed doors, many more negotiations are underway. The SEC has gotten dozens of ICOs to refund buyers and pay a fine, simply by reaching out and asking questions.

We received a second subpeona from the SEC, again collecting information from us as investors in a U.S. company. The legal costs of dealing with these are not insignificant. We will not invest in any further U.S. deals until the SEC clarifies token rules. Pivot to Asia. 
— Michael Arrington (@arrington) September 28, 2018

When the SEC reaches out to companies that did an ICO, it is usually through the company’s law firm. The SEC requests a vast trove of documents related to the ICO. Yahoo Finance and Decrypt have obtained communication that the law firm Cooley, which represented many ICOs, sent to one client after an SEC subpoena. The attorney letter warns, “The SEC is likely examining whether [client] should be considered a security under the U.S. federal securities laws… For the purposes of this preservation hold, ‘document’ is defined very broadly.”

Such language is leading many companies to refund their ICOs rather than attempt a legal fight. As one source at a company that got subpoenaed says, “The last thing we want is a press release they put out with only our name on it.”

Refunding tokens


The Fan-Controlled Football League (FCFL), the first ICO to be listed on the mainstream crowdfunding platform Indiegogo (through a partnership with MicroVentures), is one example. FCFL raised $5.2 million last year. In August of this year, MicroVentures quietly returned the money to the initial buyers. 

There’s just one problem with refunding. If an ICO gathered the proper information on its buyers, and hadn’t yet launched its token, returning the money is doable. But for ICOs that have launched their token, refunding is not so simple.

“It’s not even really possible,” says Jony Levin, CEO of Chainalysis. “In a lot of cases people bought tokens in ICOs through exchange accounts at places like Kraken. So you can’t just send tokens back to the address you got them from, because that’s an exchange address. If ICOs are made to refund buyers, it will have to be similar to the Mt. Gox case: you make a public announcement and people have to prove they were a contributor.”

As a way to pacify the SEC, some ICOs are attempting to convert their utility token to a security token. Iconomi, which raised more than $10 million in an ICO, is one example. In a blog post this month, Iconomi wrote that its token holders, “will be able to exchange their ICN tokens for tokenized shares in a joint-stock company presented as eICN tokens. This new structure brings legal clarity for all stakeholders.”

Filecoin, Blockstack, Props, Origin, and TrustToken, the five ICOs that have listed on the platform CoinList, all sold only to accredited investors, and none have launched their actual token yet. A source close to Blockstack says the company sees its token as a utility, but out of caution, chose to treat it like a security and comply with all the relevant securities laws.

“Right now it feels like a massive canyon”

All of this SEC action may sound like very bad news for ICOs, but many in the industry have a more optimistic take: regulatory clarity will bring growth. In addition, more and more companies considering a token sale are now reaching out to the SEC proactively.

ICO-Funded Startups
“I do think that businesses on the up-and-up can navigate through it, and that in just two or three years we’ll have clarity, and we’ll look back on this time as a speed bump,” says the CEO of a well-known tech company who has closely watched the ICO space. “Of course, if you’re a company that is dealing with an SEC subpoena, right now it doesn’t feel like a speed bump, right now it feels like a massive canyon.”

The lingering lack of clarity has driven a group of crypto companies, led by Ripple, to hire D.C. lobbyists to push Congress on behalf of the industry.

From the SEC’s perspective, there is no lack of clarity. The sniff tests are the same as they have been for decades. The SEC is applying the same securities laws to ICOs that it always applies.

“Everybody’s holding their breath for the SEC to create some kind of coin rule, and they’re not going to,” says a securities attorney at one high-profile Silicon Valley firm. “They’re applying the same laws, the same statutes, the same rules, to stocks and bonds and everything else.”

In other words, there’s even a lack of clarity around whether there is a lack of regulatory clarity.

Source: https://decryptmedia.com/2018/10/10/sec-tightens-the-noose-on-ico-funded-startups/

This story is a collaboration between Yahoo Finance and Decrypt, with additional reporting by Josh Quittner.

Monday, September 17, 2018

Startup Capital: The NYC Venture Capital News Digest: 9/17/18

The NYC Venture Capital News Digest: 9/17/18

startup capital
From Alleywatch.com
According to a recent SEC filing, Contour Venture Partners has submitted the paperwork for its second opportunity fund. The filing indicates the offering is for $50M and nothing has closed yet.

According to a recent SEC filing, alpha4 Ventures, a fund focused on investing in Latin America, has held its first close for its first fund at $10M. The total offering is for $40M according to the filing and the filing indicates that there were 14 participants in this tranche. alpha4 Ventures is led by General Partners Eduaro Castro-Wright (previous Vice Chariman of Walmart) and Sebastian Castro Galnares.




startup capital
alpha4 Ventures
$10M - Fund I
According to a recent SEC filing, coworking space Company (which was previously known as Grand Central Tech), has had its first close for its first fund at $9.16M.
Company
$9.16M - Fund I
The full offering amount is for $60M. The filing indicates that there were 21 parties that participated in this tranche.

Source:

Saturday, September 8, 2018

Startup Capital Not Needed, It's Blockchain-Based E-Commerce

Blockchain-Based E-Commerce Platform to Help Merchants Open Shops Without Startup Capital


From Cointelegraph by Connor Blenkinsop Sept. 6, 2018

A startup e-commerce ecosystem is turning to blockchain to help businesses become more operationally efficient, while enabling billions of users on social media “to generate income with ease.”

TIPO says it has identified three major problems facing the e-commerce market today. According to the company, many of the platforms currently dominating the industry are too focused on buying and selling when there are many other services that can benefit merchants and their loyal customers. Plus, while online payments have continued to rise, market share is yet to reach its true potential. Lastly, businesses are wasting time and money through “suboptimal logistics and warehousing operations.”

Startup Capital
Startup Capital
Looking towards the vast user bases enjoyed by the likes of Facebook, Instagram and Snapchat, TIPO argues that most visitors to such platforms haven’t been able to grasp their “limitless” monetization potential – nor have the businesses trying to reach them. As an example of how this platform wants to help everyday social media users make money, TIPO says they would be able to become sales agents for the manufacturers and merchants of products they have purchased and loved. Resultantly, they are paid money for referring their favorite items – be it a hat or a pair of shoes – to friends.

TIPO also hopes to offer advantages to every other stakeholder in e-commerce. While merchants would find it easy to open their very own shop without the need for a large amount of startup capital, the people who buy their products would get the chance to negotiate the best prices, receive tokens for their loyalty, and benefit from blockchain-based tracking methods which are designed to reduce the rates of counterfeit or fake products in the marketplace. In a nod to affiliate marketing, social media users would be paid every time someone clicks on a merchant’s link they have shared. Finally, the businesses shipping the products would also be able to reduce the risk of being given fake orders – and benefit from tools enabling them to “schedule [the] shipping time and route early and efficiently.”

Optimizing payments

According to TIPO’s white paper, e-commerce businesses have been struggling to hit the happy medium between giving users the freedom to make payments online while ensuring that merchants are paid promptly. TIPO aims to remedy this by offering “fast and immediate transactions even during weekends or holidays” and ensuring retailers receive funds as soon as customers successfully complete a transaction. This is going to be achieved through TPO tokens.

The startup is also hoping to help other small e-tailers by reducing their shipping costs and helping the high cost of sales and marketing to tumble substantially.

TIPO acknowledges that its concept can be achieved without blockchain, but argues this technology offers several benefits. For example, buyers and merchants are given the chance to rate each other, and there’s a “guarantee” that payments are processed accurately and on time, with a transaction history that’s immutably recorded. Shoppers can also benefit from healthier discounts and benefits by locking up their TPO tokens.

The future forecast

TIPO is holding an initial coin offering in several stages. A private sale concludes on Sept 20, with a presale taking place from Sept 12 to Oct 9. Finally, the ICO itself will run from Oct 10 to Nov 10.

Development on the TIPO project began in June 2017, with web development starting in August 2017 and Android development in January of this year. Work will commence on an iOS version of the platform in October, paving the way for TIPO to be released in beta come January 2019. By March 2019, it hopes to offer artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning functionality.

Source: https://cointelegraph.com/news/blockchain-based-e-commerce-platform-to-help-merchants-open-shops-without-startup-capital