• As On-Demand Valet Battle Intensifies, Luxe CEO Shifts Gears

    Curtis LeeThe battle to baby your car is heating up. This morning, Zirx, a year-old, San Francisco-based company that will park your car, wash it, fill up its gas tank, and rotate its tires, is announcing $30 million in new funding. The round comes roughly a month after Luxe, another San Francisco-based valet app, raised $20 million. (Luxe has now raised roughly $25 million altogether, while Zirx has raised around $36 million.)

    Yesterday, we talked with Luxe CEO Curtis Lee – a former product manager at Zynga, YouTube, Google, Skype, and Groupon — about the competition, and whether and when these types of companies turn profitable. Our chat has been edited for length.

    You now have 40 full-time employees and hundreds of contract workers parking customers’ cars in San Francisco, L.A., and Chicago. Yet you say that parking cars is step one. What’s next?

    We’re more of a services platform than anything else. We happen to park your car, but we’re already doing gas fill-ups, car washes, and oil changes . . . Your car is effectively an urban locker, and we want to get stuff delivered to your car, as well as do things with it, like pick up your keys, get your groceries . . .

    How do you decide when to roll out new services?

    I’m a product manager. My cofounder [CTO Craig Martin] is a engineer. We worked at Zynga together, and we tend to like to do experimental things often. If they work, we double down. If they don’t, we won’t. And we saw that early on, the primary reason customers decided to use us was for our additional services.

    What are you charging for some of these services?

    Our rates vary depending on the city, but in San Francisco it’s $5 an hour [to have your car valet parked] and $15 per day. Car washes are $40. Gas fill-ups are the cost of the gas plus a $7.99 surcharge.

    Are you dealing with much poaching?

    Certainly, other companies are trying, especially because our guys are so obvious on the streets [wearing the Luxe uniform, which are bright-blue jackets]. We’re the only company that shows customers where our lots and our valets are on a map. That makes us vulnerable sometimes, but our retention remains very high. We think [our workforce] is fairly happy. We also have more demand than our competitors, and [valet pay] is hourly based, so [our valets are] not going to make as much money elsewhere. It’s like Uber; people want to work for Uber because it has the [consumer] demand.

    What of allegations that on-demand startups short-change workers by classifying them as independent contractors?

    We’re not obsessed or worried about it. I think it’s more a philosophy thing than the letter of the law. You treat employees – and independent contractors – with respect. It’s not as much about classifications. Who knows what will happen. [Any potential legal changes] aren’t in our hands. But we’re keeping an eye on it.

    Do you pay your valets minimum wage? Do they make much in tips?

    It’s completely optional, but our customers can give tips [via our app] because they were trying to do it regardless, through cash. Our guys make way more than minimum wage for sure because of the demand we get.

    Also, our guys don’t need to own cars. There’s no equipment necessary [beyond a scooter to get to customers more quickly]. Twenty percent of Uber drivers’ salaries go toward wear and tear and gas.

    It’s seems like potentially hazardous work, zipping around town to pick up and drop off customers’ cars as quickly as possible.

    We put [our valets] through extensive training so they understand where they need to drop off people’s cars, as well as make sure they aren’t doing anything that puts them at risk. Our bright blue jackets are also designed to ensure people see them. And we have a valet office where people can hang out and eat free food and relax and, if there are issues, go to office hours and talk with us.

    Your arrangement with city garages is pretty central to your future profitability. Are these typically monthly arrangements for spots?

    We have different agreements with different parking lots all the time — everything from monthly to yearly to daily arrangements. But parking lot owners take care of us and we take care of them, turning over the space enough times that we can make a profit on a per unit basis. The best analogy is to Priceline. For hotels, unused rooms are sunk costs. Priceline has created a billion-dollar business just by providing discounts to customers and getting [hotels paid] for their underutilized inventory.

    Still, some VCs think services businesses like yours are too cost intensive. What are they missing?

    We’re basically creating a behavioral change. Those days of searching for parking, wasting time, wasting gas – they’ll disappear in time. Also, parking alone is a $100 billion market globally and a $30 billion market in the U.S. And you’re seeing tremendous growth of car ownership internationally, including in Brazil, China, and India, all of which are undergoing massive urbanization without enough infrastructure to keep up. There are just huge opportunities for us.

    Will you be fundraising again this year?

    We’re open to raising [again] when the time is right.

    Photo courtesy of Forbes.

    (Bay Area readers, to learn more about the shifts in on-demand startups, you might want to check this out next month. We’ll be there to moderate a panel.)

  • StrictlyVC: April 21, 2015

    H, everyone! So the good news: It looks like you received yesterday’s email. [Fist pump, karate kick.] The bad news (for us alone) is that our new email delivery partner is a bit more technical than what we’re accustomed to, so we spent much of yesterday figuring out what’s what. Put another way, no column. Hope you enjoy the rest, though.:)

    Also, just a quick mention that our San Francisco-based May event (with Parker Conrad of Zenefits, Jeremy Liew of Lightspeed Venture Partners and other terrific guests) is coming up in just three weeks. Around 150 of you are already planning to attend. If you’ve RSVP’d but not purchased a ticket, you might want to do that before we reach capacity. (We’d also like to get your T-shirt orders in, give our caterers a final head count, etc.) Thanks again to our valued sponsors Personal Capital, Amazon Web Services, and Galvanize for helping make the evening possible!

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    Twitter just announced a crackdown on abusive language, unveiling a new feature designed to filter out threatening messages. More here.

    Uber must defend against a lawsuit accusing it of discriminating against blind people by refusing to transport guide dogs, a federal judge has ruled. Among more than 40 instances cited by plaintiffs of drivers refusing to comply with the law, one Uber driver allegedly refused a blind woman’s plea to pull over once she realized he’d locked her guide dog in the trunk of his car.

    —–

    New Fundings

    eToro, an eight-year-old, Limassol, Cyprus-based social trading and investment platform that allows users to trade currencies, commodities, indices and stocks, has raised an undisclosed amount of funding from CommerzVentures, Russia’s Sberbank and Ping An Ventures of China, bringing the total amount that the company has raised to date to $39 million. Last year, eToro raised $27 million from Ping An Ventures and SBT Venture Capital. (The company also reportedly has a $10 million credit line from Silicon Valley Bank.)Bringhub, a 2.5-year-old, L.A.-based e-commerce platform that enables digital media companies to add shopping-cart capabilities to their sites, has raised $1.8 million in seed funding, including from Capital Union Investments Hong Kong, BAM Ventures, Canyon Creek Capital, Rachel Zoe Ventures, and others. Women’s Wear Daily has more here.

    Color Genomics, a two-year-old, Burlingame, Ca.-based company whose $249 saliva test kit for women  will check for 19 genetic variants known to be correlated with a higher risk of breast cancer or ovarian cancer, has raised $15 million led by Khosla Ventures and Formation 8, with participation from a long list of influential angel backers, including Laurene Powell Jobs,  Yahoo co-founder Jerry Yang, and Dropbox co-founder and CEO Drew Houston. Bloomberg has more here.
    Dimension Therapeutics, a two-year-old, Cambridge, Ma.-based company that’s developing treatments for disorders associated with the liver, has raised $65 million in Series B funding led by New Leaf Venture Partners, with participation from Jennison Associates, Partner Fund Management, RA Capital Management, Rock Springs Capital, and Tourbillon Global Ventures, along with earlier backers Fidelity Biosciences and OrbiMed. The company has now raised at least $124.5 million altogether, shows Crunchbase.

    Evoucher, a five-year-old, Jakarta, Indonesia-based daily deals company, has raised an undisclosed amount of seed funding (its first outside capital) from Value in Technology Indonesia. The outlet e27 has more here.

    Full Measure Education, a two-year-old, Washington D.C., company whose communications software for students aims to increase their engagement, has raised $5.5 million in Series B funding led by Safeguard Scientifics, with participation from Bull City Venture Partners.

    Glukos, a 10-year-old, Gresham, Or.-based natural performance energy foods brand, has raised an undisclosed amount of Series A funding led by EIF Fund.The company, whose products are available in liquid form, gel, powder, tablet, gummy and bars, was founded by former Nike executive Mark Jensen; he and his CFO, Kurt Peterson, reportedly bought the company back from 30 investors in 2009 with the help of M&K Acquisitions, a company formed exclusively to buy it.

    Grannus, a three-year-old, Tuscon, Az.-based producer of ammonia, urea, and other nitrogen fertilizer products, has raised $2 million in Series A funding from an undisclosed strategic investor. More here.

    HealthKartPlus, a two-year-old, Gurgaon, India-based drug e-store, has raised $6 million in fresh funding, including from Omidyar Network, Intel Capital, Sequoia Capital, Kae Capital, and MakeMyTrip founder Deep Kalra,  The company had previously raised $5.5 million across two rounds. Tech in Asia has more here.

    InTurn, a 1.5-year-old, New York-based marketplace that funnels excess inventory to retailers in private online showrooms, has raised $3.6 million in Series A funding led by Forerunner Ventures, with participation from Novel TMT Ventures, Lerer Hippeau Ventures, T5 Capital, Ariba cofounder Bobby Lent and earlier investor Beanstalk Capital.MyTime, a nearly four-year-old, San Francisco-based service for booking appointments online, has raised $9.3 million in Series B funding led by earlier backer Upfront Ventures, with participation from new investors Accelerator Ventures, Daher Capital, Khosla Ventures and Westfield Corp.

    Music Messenger, a year-old, Herzliya, Israel-based company whose app enables users to create playlists from more than 100 million songs, as well as to send and receive full music tracks on their smartphone from anyone on their contact list, has raised $30 million in new funding led by Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich, with participation from record producers Tiesto and David Guetta; singers Nicki Minaj and will.i.am; and others. The company had previously raised at least $5 million. (Forbes took a look at it in December.)

    Pathar, a three-year-old, Colorado Springs, Colo.-based social media intelligence company, has raised $6.5 million in Series A funding from the pooled angel investment fund Woodside O’Brien, with participation from OCA Ventures.

    SimplyInsured, a 2.5-year-old, San Francisco-based online health insurance platform for small businesses (it offers them comparison pricing and plan details and handles the paperwork involved in group health insurance), has raised roughly $1.8 million in seed funding from Starling Ventures, with participation from earlier backers Altair, NerdWallet co-founders Jake Gibson and Tim Chen, and others, including Y Combinator. More here.

    Spirox, a three-year-old, Menlo Park, Ca.-based company that makes medical devices for the surgical repair of nasal obstructions, has raised $18.5 million in Series B funding led by Aisling Capital and Venrock. Earlier backers Aperture Venture Partners, Correlation Ventures and Western Technology Investment also participated in the round. Spirox had previously raised at least $4 million, shows Crunchbase.Stringify, a year-old, Los Gatos, Ca.-based Internet of Things (IoT) startup that’s still operating in stealth mode, has raised $6.3 million in seed funding led by Artis Ventures, with participation from OurCrowd and other unnamed angel investors. Stringify was cofounded by Mike Yurochko, who previously ran the digital user experience team at JPMorgan Chase.

    Tal Medical, a four-year-old, Boston, Ma.-based clinical-stage medical device company that’s developing a new, non-invasive neuromodulation treatment for depression and other psychiatric disorders, has raised $14 million in funding from an unnamed institutional investor, several unnamed individual investors, and earlier backer PureTech, a Cambridge, Ma. firm that conceived the company. BetaBoston has more here.
    Tradegecko, a three-year-old, Singapore-based software-as-a-service startup that helps business owners manage inventory and orders, has raised $6.5 million in Series A  funding led by NSI Ventures and Jungle Ventures. TechCrunch has more here.

    Zhiguoguo, a young, Beijing, China-based company that provides its customers with free trademark registration, as well as (not free) legal services, has raised $3.7 million in Series A funding led by Matrix Partners China, with participation from earlier backer Legend Star. Tech In Asia has more here.
    —–
    New Funds
    Brandon Capital, a nine-year-old, Melbourne, Australia-based life sciences venture capital firm, has raised a new, $200 million Australian dollars ($154.7 million) fund, the largest life science venture fund ever to be raised in Australia, it says.
    CMEA Capital, the 26-year-old, San Francisco-based IT, life sciences, and energy-focused venture firm, has restructured several previously raised funds into a new investment vehicle and will relaunch it with the name Presidio Partners, it tells VentureWire. (The firm has moved into San Francisco’s Presidio park and former military base, where numerous other firms have set up shop over the last decade or so, including Founders Fund and IDG Ventures.) The firm says its original name, short for Chemical and Material Enterprise Association, is no longer representative of its identity. Presumably, the firm is also eager to move beyond a sexual harassment lawsuit that was brought against it in 2013 by three former employees. CMEA agreed last year to settle that case.

    The Michigan Angel Fund, a 95-member, Ann Arbor, Mi-based fund focused on early-stage companies located in Michigan, has closed its second fund with $2 million. The outfit backs startups that are seeking between $250,000 to $2,000,000.  It used its debut fund to back eight startups, including Arborlight.

    —–

    IPOs

    Blueprint Medicines, a seven-year-old, Cambridge, Ma.-based preclinical biotech that’s developing inhibitors for cancer and genetic diseases, revealed plans yesterday to raise $115 million in its IPO by offering 7.2 million shares at a price range of $15 to $17. At the midpoint of the proposed range, the company would have a market value of $421 million. Blueprint was founded with the help of Third Rock Ventures, which remains one of its largest shareholders.

    —–

    Exits

    WatchDox, a seven-year-old, Palo Alto, Ca.-based document-centric security platform that helps organizations control their critical documents via mobile devices, has been acquired by Blackberry for $150 million. The company had raised last least $35.8 million, shows Crunchbase, including from Blackstone GroupGemini Israel Ventures, Shasta Ventures, and entrepreneur-investor Shlomo Kramer. Geektime has the story here.

    —–

    People

    Billionaire Paul Allen has joined the ranks of the those looking to make spaceflight more affordable and efficient with Vulcan Aerospace. Geekwire has more here.When the NBA Clippers sold 11 months ago to former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer, it acquired a “loud and proud leader,” reports the New York Times. “I didn’t know what to expect,” Doc Rivers, the Clippers’ coach, said. “The guy’s worth $24 billion. I have to think if I had $24 billion I probably would be different. I hope not, but I probably would be. He’s the most normal $24 billion guy I know.”

    Matthew Melymuka has cofounded a new, New York-based growth-stage firm focused on enterprise software companies called PeakSpan Capital. Melymuka previously spent seven months as a senior associate at Greycroft Partners and several years as an associate with the growth-stage venture firm Investor Growth Capital. You can learn more about PeakSpan here.

    Jeff Maters, a longtime VP at Chicago-based Pritzer Group Venture Capital (and an investor and analyst before that, including at UBS, GMV Capital, and Lehman Brothers), has left the firm. Maters didn’t respond by our press time regarding his next moves.
    —–
    Jobs
    Kapor Capital is looking for a partner of portfolio services, a new role at the firm. The job is in Oakland, Ca.
    —–
    Essential Reads
    Google will now let you see everything you’ve ever searched.Twitter has begun allowing users to receive direct messages from other users, regardless if they follow each other.

    How click farms have inflated social media currency.

    —–
    Detours
    The most luxurious airport lounges in the world.Why people love a good shower-cry.

    How an octopus controls its very complicated movements.

    —–
    Retail Therapy
    The Nike Zoom Terra Kiger, when hiking boots aren’t your thing.  (H/T: Bryce Roberts)Good enough for a coffee shop but built for your house, should you want a $7,000 espresso machine.

     

     

  • StrictlyVC: April 20, 2015

    Hi, and happy Monday, everyone! Hope you had a wonderful weekend.
    —–
    Top News in the A.M.
    Nokia is reportedly plotting a return to the consumer phone market in 2016.San Francisco denizens face an ugly reality. Phone numbers with 415 are running so low that phone companies have begun assigning numbers starting with area code 628.
    —–
    Wences Casares on the Future of Xapo (and Bitcoin)
    Wences Casares is among the most-trusted proponents of the digital currency bitcoin. Indeed, last year, Casares – a serial entrepreneur who previously ran the digital wallet service Lemon (acquired by LifeLock in late 2013) – raised $41 million for his now 40-person, Palo Alto, Ca.-based company, Xapo, including from Benchmark and Fortress Investment Group.
    That amount has since been dwarfed by other bitcoin startups – the payments processor and wallet startup Coinbase announced a $75 million round in January, for example – but Casares says he doesn’t need more capital any time soon. Despite a price crash last year and some high-profile security breaches, bitcoin’s growth, and Xapo’s, continues apace, he says. We talked the other day in a conversation that has been edited here for length.
    When you were raising money for Xapo last year, a single bitcoin equaled $650. Now, bitcoin are worth $225 a piece. How has that price fall impacted your business?
    For people who’ve been looking at bitcoin for three or four years, that’s not really the story. Bitcoin has done the same thing several times: [jump from], nine cents to $10; $1 to $17; $17 to $30 — all the way to $100. So those who’ve been around along time have seen it go from nine cents to $200.
    Also, when we raised that money, there were 3 million people using bitcoin. Today, there are 12 million. There were 20,000 transactions; today there are 100,000. Back then, bitcoin represented 50 percent of all cryptocurrency volume; today, it represents 96 percent.
    But are your customers transacting more now that it’s worth less, or are they continuing to sit on it?
    There are two very different markets. You have the California and New York market, [where people] own it as a speculative payment and who never do a payment, and [those 10 million people] account for most of the bitcoin. Then you have emerging markets where you see [2 million other] users with a lot less coins, and they’re using it because they don’t have credit cards and that hasn’t changed with the price.
    Where are people most actively using bitcoin in emerging markets, and is it becoming any easier to use in those places? 
    People are using it in India, Turkey, Indonesia, Brazil. The barriers remain enormous. It’s very hard to use it. But if you have no other way of paying online, you’re willing to go through enormous hurdles.
    You’ve said that establishing trust is the biggest hurdle that bitcoin faces. Isn’t simply understanding it an even bigger obstacle? 
    Bitcoin looks like the internet before there was a browser. A lot of us tried explaining PCP stack and how the protocol works [etc.] and nobody really started using it because of those explanations. It happened because someone wanted to keep in touch over email or Skype or Facebook.
    [Similarly], the main use case for bitcoin is micro-transactions, and the internet will look different five years from now when you can move cents and hundreds of users who don’t have credit cards but $5 of bits can unlock certain things that you can’t unlock any other way.
    Xapo’s business is centered on a bitcoin wallet whose users store the bitcoin in vaults – or physical servers — around the world. What are they like, how many does Xapo manage, and why are they located where they are?
    These are large facilities where there are sections owned by other companies, with sections that are exclusive to us that we don’t share with anyone else. We have five – one in Switzerland and the others on other continents. They’re not very close because you have to be able to lose one due to a disaster like an earthquake, flooding or nuclear war.
    Would you ever need more?
    No. Even if we were 10,000 times our current size, it isn’t like bitcoin take up more space. We have five [servers] because each bitcoin has five keys. Imagine a door that has five keys and you need three to open it. Basically, if you lose one or two facilities owing to natural disaster or theft, you can use the other three to move the bitcoin to a safe location.
    Many bitcoin companies are tackling numerous things, like Coinbase. It’s a wallet provider. It’s also an exchange. Why are you focused on the wallet alone?
    Because it’s hard enough to win at one business and do it really well. At the beginning, AOL gave you connectivity and weather and email addresses and financial news, and it didn’t win at any of those things. Bitcoin is the same. A lot of companies do many things; we’d rather build the best wallet in the market.
    ———
    New Fundings
    58.com, a 10-year-old, Chaoyang, China-based classifieds site (China’s biggest in terms of monthly unique visitors), has acquired a 43.2 percent stake in its Beijing-based rival Ganji for $412.2 million in cash and stock, reports TechCrunch. 58.com, which went public on the New York Stock Exchange in 2013, also disclosed that Tencent Holdings has provided it with $400 million in new funding to increase its ownership position in the company. Tencent now owns 25.1 percent of the business. More here.AllCampus, a 2.5-year-old, Chicago, Il.-based startup that collaborates with universities and helps them expand online enrollment programs, has raised $844,000 as part of a round that’s targeting $3 million, shows an SEC filing. The company has previously raised $1.5 million in debt and a separate, $6 million round from Noson Lawen Partners.Boombotix, a three-year-old, San Francisco-based maker of portable and Bluetooth-enabled loudspeakers, audio accessories and mobile apps, has raised $4 million as part of a $10.8 million round, shows an SEC filing. According to Crunchbase, the company had previously raised $4 million from a long list of investors, including Red Hills VenturesGreat Oaks Venture Capital, Grishin Robotics, Walden Venture Capital, Baseline Ventures, and The Social+Capital Partnership.

    Cnano, an eight-year-old, Santa Clara, Ca.-based maker of  multi-wall carbon nanotubes products for the energy storage, structural and electronics industries, has raised $15 million in Series C funding led by GRC SinoGreen Fund, with participation from Hotung Investment Holdings; several new, unnamed investors; and earlier investors Pangaea Ventures, Presidio Partners, WI Harper Group, IDG Capital Partners and Megatop Capital. The company has raised at least $27 million to date, shows Crunchbase.

    Contego Medical, a 10-year-old, Raleigh, N.C.-based maker of angioplasty balloon and stent delivery catheters, has raised $5.6 million in Series B funding led by Hatteras Venture Partners, with participation from Mountain Group Partners, Lookout Capital and Medical Mutual.

    Citified, a year-old, Portland, Or.-based peer-to-peer parking app startup, has raised $600,000 in seed funding, shows an SEC filing that lists a $900,000 target. The service appears to be available in Portland only right now. More here.

    Fanli, a nine-year-old, Shanghai, China-based online rebate and flash sale site, has raised an undisclosed amount of Series C funding at a $1 billion valuation led by Rakuten, says the company. According to Crunchbase, Fanli has raised at least $30 million from investors previously, including QiMing Venture Partners, SIG China, and Steamboat Ventures. China Money Network has more here.

    Flashpoint Global Partners, a 3.5-year-old, New York-based security service that provides its customers with data about areas on the internet where mainstream search engines are unable to penetrate (also known as “the Dark Web”),  has raised $5 million led byTechOperators, with participation from Bloomberg Beta, Cisco Investments, Greycroft Partners, and K2 Intelligence.

    Freshdesk, a five-year-old, San Francisco-based maker of cloud-based customer support software, has raised $50 million in new funding led by Tiger Global Management, with Accel Partners and Google Capital participating. The company has now raised roughly $95 million altogether. TechCrunch has more here.
    GamEffective, a 2.5-year-old, Tel Aviv, Israel-based enterprise gamification company (its graphics aim to improve sales, customer service, on-boarding and more), has raised $3 million in Series A funding led by Verint Systems, with participation from the company’s earlier backers, including 2B Angels and Shaked Ventures. The company had previously raised at least $1 million in seed funding, shows Crunchbase.KiteDesk, a 3.5-year-old, Tampa, Fl.-based sales intelligence platform, has raised $4 million in seed funding from unnamed angel investors. VentureBeat has more here.
    MX, a five-year-old, Provo, Ut.-based company that partners with financial institutions and online banking and payment network companies to help them create segments, deploy offers, and start tracking campaigns, among other things, has raised $20 million in new funding as part of a $30 million round, shows an SEC filing. The round doubles the amount that the company had previously raised across numerous rounds, shows Crunchbase. Earlier backers include Peak Ventures, Commerce Ventures, North Hill Ventures, TTV Capital.OneSignal, a year-old, San Francisco-based company that makes retention marketing tools and push notifications for mobile developers, has raised more than $2 million in seed funding, including from Rakuten Ventures, Y Combinator, Tamares Capital and numerous individual investors, including Justin Kan.Oscar, a nearly two-year-old health insurance company that focuses heavily on technology, design, and data, has raised a whopping $145 million in new funding led by Founders Fund at a valuation that TechCrunch sources peg at $1.5 billion. The company has now raised $295 million altogether, including from Li Ka-shing, Wellington ManagementGoldman Sachs, Thrive Capital, Khosla Ventures, General Catalyst Partners, Red Swan Ventures, BoxGroup and others. More here.

    Samba TV, a 6.5-year-old, San Francisco-based startup that provides television analytics, is now partly owned by the ad giant Interpublic Group, which has acquired a minority stake as part an effort to understand how consumers are watching television. The companies aren’t disclosing the size of the investment. Samba had previously raised at least $8.2 million, including from August Capital, Gary Lauder, and Mark Cuban, shows Crunchbase. The New York Times has more here.

    Sulekha, a 15-year-old, Chennai, India-based local services classifieds company, has raised $28 million in Series C funding led by Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund GIC, with participation from earlier backer Norwest Venture Partners. The company had previously raised at least $16.5 million, including from Mitsui Global. The outlet Inc42 has more here.

    Widetronix, a 12-year-old, Ithaca, New York-based company that makes ultra-low power sensor platforms, has raised $1.2 million in equity and debt, shows an SEC filing. According to Crunchbase, the company has raised less than $1 million in the past, including from Gotham Ventures.

    —–
    New Funds
    Sep Kamvar, director of the Social Computing group at the MIT Media Lab, has raised a $2.5 million venture fund called Fireweed Fund, shows an SEC filing. Kamvar spent four years as the head of personalization at Google. He was also the founder and CEO of Kaltix, a personalized search company that was acquired by Google in 2003.
    —–
    IPOs
    Baozun, an eight-year-old, Shanghai, China-based e-commerce service company that helps smaller businesses with site design, development and hosting, IT infrastructure, customer service, warehousing and logistics, is planning to raise up to $200 million in a U.S. IPO, shows a new SEC filing. The company’s biggest shareholders include Alibaba, which holds a 23.5 percent stake in the company; Softbank, which owns 17.8 percent; funds owned by Goldman Sachs, which owns 9.8 percent; and the private equity firm Infinity Group, which owns 6.6 percent.Legend Holdings, the parent company of Chinese PC vendor Lenovo Group, is reportedly planning to launch an IPO in Hong Kong later this year that could be the biggest in Asia so far this year. More here.China’s government has just drafted rules for companies’ IPO applications to be reviewed by the nation’s two stock exchanges, rather than regulators. More here.

    Three IPOs planned this week.

    —–
    Exits
    SunGard Data Systems, the Wayne, Pa.-based financial tech company, is exploring a sale that could value it at as much as $10 billion, says Reuters. SunGard was acquired for $11.4 billion a decade ago by Silver Lake Partners, TPG Capital, Bain Capital, Blackstone Group, Goldman Sachs Capital Partners, KKR and Providence Equity Partners.
    —–
    People
    Klout co-founder and CEO Joe Fernandez has stepped down from his role leading the company, which sold to Lithium Technologies for a reported $164 million in cash and stock a little more than a year ago. According to Recode, Fernandez is off to pursue other startup ideas; as part of the transition, he’s also joining Lithium’s board of directors.According to a new book coming out next month, Elon Musk very nearly sold his car company, Tesla Motors, to Google in 2013. More here.Ellen Pao’s attorneys, Therese Lawless and Alan Exelrod, talk with the San Francisco Chronicle about losing, sexism and what’s wrong with the tech industry.

    —–
    Essential Reads
    Twitter has filed a “tweetstorm” of trademark applications.Late Friday, WhatsApp disclosed that it now has 800 million users. More here.
    —–
    Detours
    The quick trick one self-made billionaire uses when trying to make a tough decision.A winning Craigslist ad. (You try selling a 2002 Ford Taurus.)What 10 famous movie mansions would cost in real life.

    —–
    Retail Therapy
    Save your whiteboard ideas.You’ll be the coolest parent at the soccer match with this chair. (Also, good luck getting out of it!)
  • Wences Casares on the Future of Xapo (and Bitcoin)

    Wences CasaresWences Casares is among the most-trusted proponents of the digital currency bitcoin. Indeed, last year, Casares – a serial entrepreneur who previously ran the digital wallet service Lemon (acquired by LifeLock in late 2013) – raised $41 million for his now 40-person, Palo Alto, Ca.-based company, Xapo, including from Benchmark and Fortress Investment Group.

    That amount has since been dwarfed by other bitcoin startups – the payments processor and wallet startup Coinbase announced a $75 million round in January, for example – but Casares says he doesn’t need more capital any time soon. Despite a price crash last year and some high-profile security breaches, bitcoin’s growth, and Xapo’s, continues apace, he says. We talked the other day in a conversation that has been edited here for length.

    When you were raising money for Xapo last year, a single bitcoin equaled $650. Now, bitcoin are worth $225 a piece. How has that price fall impacted your business?

    For people who’ve been looking at bitcoin for three or four years, that’s not really the story. Bitcoin has done the same thing several times: [jump from], nine cents to $10; $1 to $17; $17 to $30 — all the way to $100. So those who’ve been around along time have seen it go from nine cents to $200.

    Also, when we raised that money, there were 3 million people using bitcoin. Today, there are 12 million. There were 20,000 transactions; today there are 100,000. Back then, bitcoin represented 50 percent of all cryptocurrency volume; today, it represents 96 percent.

    But are your customers transacting more now that it’s worth less, or are they continuing to sit on it?

    There are two very different markets. You have the California and New York market, [where people] own it as a speculative payment and who never do a payment, and [those 10 million people] account for most of the bitcoin. Then you have emerging markets where you see [2 million other] users with a lot less coins, and they’re using it because they don’t have credit cards and that hasn’t changed with the price.

    Where are people most actively using bitcoin in emerging markets, and is it becoming any easier to use in those places?

    People are using it in India, Turkey, Indonesia, Brazil. The barriers remain enormous. It’s very hard to use it. But if you have no other way of paying online, you’re willing to go through enormous hurdles.

    You’ve said that establishing trust is the biggest hurdle that bitcoin faces. Isn’t simply understanding it an even bigger obstacle?

    Bitcoin looks like the internet before there was a browser. A lot of us tried explaining PCP stack and how the protocol works [etc.] and nobody really started using it because of those explanations. It happened because someone wanted to keep in touch over email or Skype or Facebook.

    [Similarly], the main use case for bitcoin is micro-transactions, and the internet will look different five years from now when you can move cents and hundreds of users who don’t have credit cards but $5 of bits can unlock certain things that you can’t unlock any other way.

    Xapo’s business is centered on a bitcoin wallet whose users store the bitcoin in vaults – or physical servers — around the world. What are they like, how many does Xapo manage, and why are they located where they are?

    These are large facilities where there are sections owned by other companies, with sections that are exclusive to us that we don’t share with anyone else. We have five – one in Switzerland and the others on other continents. They’re not very close because you have to be able to lose one due to a disaster like an earthquake, flooding or nuclear war.

    Would you ever need more?

    No. Even if we were 10,000 times our current size, it isn’t like bitcoin take up more space. We have five [servers] because each bitcoin has five keys. Imagine a door that has five keys and you need three to open it. Basically, if you lose one or two facilities owing to natural disaster or theft, you can use the other three to move the bitcoin to a safe location.

    Many bitcoin companies are tackling numerous things, like Coinbase. It’s a wallet provider. It’s also an exchange. Why are you focused on the wallet alone?

    Because it’s hard enough to win at one business and do it really well. At the beginning, AOL gave you connectivity and weather and email addresses and financial news, and it didn’t win at any of those things. Bitcoin is the same. A lot of companies do many things; we’d rather build the best wallet in the market.

  • StrictlyVC: April 17, 2015

    Hi, happy Friday, everyone. No column today. (Psst, web visitors, you can find an easier-to-read version of this morning’s email here.)

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    Wikileaks published a searchable database of 30,000 leaked Sony documents yesterday. More here.

    —–

    New Fundings

    Assured Labor, a seven-year-old, New York-based company that helps low- and middle-income workers across Latin America find jobs through their mobile phones, has raised $6.8 million in Series B funding led by earlier backer Capital Indigo, a Mexico-based venture firm. The round also included new investors Mexico Ventures, Promotora Social Mexicoand San Francisco-based firm Thayer Ventures. The company had previously raised $5.5 million in Series A funding, including from Great Oaks Venture Capital, Nexus Venture Partners, Kima VenturesEnzyme Venture Capital, and entrepreneur-investor Fabrice Grinda.

    Attivo Networks, a four-year-old, Fremont, Calif.-based company that’s been developing cyberthreat detection technology, has raised $8 million in Series A funding led by Bain Capital Ventures.

    COBI, a year-old, Frankfurt, Germany-based company whose hardware and “intelligent” software offerings create more than 100 ways to upgrade a traditional bike, has raised more than $4 million in funding from Capnamic Ventures, Iris Capital and Creathor Venture. More here.

    EyeEm, a four-year-old, Berlin, Germany-based online marketplace where photographers can showcase and sell their photos, has raised $18 million in new funding led by Valar Ventures, with participation from earlier backers Earlybird Ventures, Passion Capital, Wellington PartnersAtlantic Labs, and Open Ocean Capital. Fortune has more here.

    Flatiron School, a three-year-old, New York-based computer science educational platform for kids and young adults, has raised $9 million in Series B funding led by Thrive Capital, with participation from earlier backers CRV and Matrix Partners. Last year, the company raised $5.5 million in Series A funding.

    Hydra Biosciences, a 14-year-old, Cambridge, Ma.-based company that develops drugs to treat pain, inflammation, cardiovascular and other diseases, has raised $11 million in Series E funding from AbingworthAdvanced Technology Ventures, BioVentures Investors, and Lilly Ventures. According to Crunchbase, the company raised its last financing, a $22 million Series D round, in 2009.

    Ihiji, a five-year-old, Austin, Tex.-based remote monitoring tool developer, has raised $1.8 million in Series A funding from Jopeko, the Capital Factory, Silverton Partners, and Floodgate. Austin Business Journal has more here.

    MeQuilibrium, a five-year-old, Boston-based online platform for managing stress, has raised $9 million in Series B funding led by Safeguard Scientifics, with participation from earlier backer Chrysalis Ventures and others. According to Crunchbase, the company has now raised $14.3 million altogether.

    MoneyStream, a 2.5-year-old, Los Gatos, Ca.-based personal money management service, has raised $3.2 million in Series A funding led by H&R Block, with participation from angel investors, including entrepreneur and tech executive Kim Polese.

    Omeicos Therapeutics, a two-year-old, Berlin, Germany-based company developing small-molecule therapeutics to prevent and treat cardiovascular diseases, including atrial fibrillation, has raised 6.2 million euros ($6.7 million) in Series A financing led by Vesalius Biocapital Partners, with participation from High-Tech Gruenderfonds, KfW Group and VC Fonds Technologie Berlin.

    Peloton Cycle, a three-year-old, New York-based stationary bike startup with a built-in tablet for live streaming cycling classes, has raised $30 million in Series C funding led by Tiger Global Management and True Ventures. The company has now raised $44 million altogether. TechCrunch has more here.

    Phantom Cyber, a year-old, Palo Alto, Calif.-based startup that automates enterprise security operations, has raised $2.7 million in seed funding from Foundation Capital and Rein Capital, along with a long list of angel investors, including former Symantec CEO John Thompson and former Sourcefire CEO John Becker.

    Pledgeling, a year-old, Santa Monica, Ca.-based online platform that aims to make it easier to follow charitable influencers, create a philanthropic profile, and centralize one’s giving, has raised $4.1 million in seed funding from Double M Partners and a roster of angel investors, including “Wheel of Fortune” co-host Vanna White.

    Purch, a 12-year-old, Ogden, Ut.-based network of sites about technology, is raising between $50 million and $60 million at a valuation of between $175 million and $250 million, according to Fortune. The company has previously raised at least $40.5 million from Village Ventures, ABS Capital Partners, and Highway 12 Ventures, shows Crunchbase. More here.

    Recorded Future, a six-year-old, Somerville, Ma.-based analytics company that crawls more than 650,000 publicly available Web sources to identify possible cyber threats for its customers, has raised $12 million in Series D funding led by Reed Elsevier Ventures, with participation from MassMutual Ventures and previous backers Google Ventures, In-Q-Tel,Atlas Venture, IA Ventures, and Balderton Capital. BostInno has much more here.

    Relationship Science, a five-year-old, New York-based professional-networking startup that aims to connect top deal makers and power brokers on Wall Street and beyond, has raised $31 million in new funding from new and earlier backers, including hedge-fund manager William Ackman. The round brings the company’s total funding to date to $119 million, reports the WSJ. The company has also hired a new CEO: Jon Robson, a veteran of NYSE Euronext and Thomson Reuters. StrictlyVC talked with Relationship Science last year about its hopes to bring more VCs into its platform.

    Rethink Robotics, a seven-year-old, Boston-based maker of a robots for production and research settings, has increased the size of its Series D financing by $13.4 million, bringing the total round to $40 million. Goldman Sachs had led the earlier round; Wellington Management led the newest installment. Altogether, Rethink Robotics has raised $113.5 million. BostInno has more here.

    Robosoft, a 19-year-old, New Udupi, India-based mobile app and game developer, has raised $12 million in Series B funding from Ascent Capital and existing investor Kalaari Capital. According to Crunchbase, the company has raised at least $15.7 million in recent years (since retooling itself in 2008 from a desktop game developer). DealCurry has more here.

    Spring, a 1.5-year-old, New York-based shopping application for iOS devices, has raised $25 million in funding from BoxGroup, Yuri MilnerGoogle Ventures, Sound Ventures, Thrive Capital, and Groupe Arnault, the investment firm controlled by LVMH CEO Bernard Arnault. Fortune has more here.

    Vessel, the two-year-old, San Francisco-based online video platform cofounded by former Hulu head Jason Kilar, has raised $57.7 million in fresh funding led by Institutional Venture Partners, with participation from previous investors Greylock Partners, Benchmark and Bezos Expeditions. The company has now raised $132.5 million to date. The Guardian has the story here.

    —–

    New Funds

    .406 Ventures, the 10-year-old, Boston-based early-stage, tech focused venture firm, is raising up to $200 million for its third fund, according to an SEC filing. The company closed its most recent fund with $175 million in 2012. Boston Business Journal has more here.

    Atlas Venture, the 35-year-old, Cambridge, Ma.-based venture firm, has raised $280 million for its first biotechnology-only fund — its tenth fund altogether. The firm’s last fund, a $265 million pool closed in 2013, was used to fund both tech and biotech deals, but last fall (as some of you know) the tech and biotech teams went their own ways. Forbes has much more here.

    Helion Venture Partners, a nine-year-old, Mauritius-based venture firm focused on India-based startups, has closed its fourth fund with $300 million. TechCrunch has more here.

    —–

    IPOs

    Here are the biggest winners in the blockbuster IPO of Etsy, whose shares closed their opening day yesterday 86 percent higher than where they’d started.

    Shares of Virtu, the high-speed, computerized trading company, also debuted yesterday, ending the day 17 percent above their offering price of $19. More here.

    —–

    Exits

    Two of Washington D.C.’s tech networking and venture capital hubs are combining, with incubator and seed fund 1776 acquiring Crystal City’s Disruption Corp, launched more than a year ago by venture capitalist Paul Singh, reports the Washington Post. Singh had previously been a partner at 500 Startups. He left the outfit in 2013, enticing 500 Startups venture partner George Kellerman to join him last year. More here.

    India’s Snapdeal, e-commerce rival of Flipkart, has acquired Bangalore-based FreeCharge, a service that providers users with coupons for charging their mobile plans. Terms of the deal were not disclosed, though media outlets report the price at between $400 million and $450 million. If accurate, the deal would be the biggest M&A tie-up yet in India’s e-commerce sector — even beating out Flipkart’s $330 million acquisition of Myntra last year, notes India West.

    —–

    People

    Andrew Beebe has joined Obvious Ventures, the San Francisco-based seed-stage firm of Twitter co-founder Ev Williams, as a managing director. Beebe was previously a VP at NextEra Energy Resources and chief commercial officer at Suntech Power Holdings. He’s now focusing on renewables and clean tech opportunities for the outfit.

    Apple CEO Tim Cook apparently has the best pay-for-performance rating of any chief executive officer on the Bloomberg Pay Index, the first daily ranking of the highest-paid U.S. executives. More here.

    Steve Dowling has officially replaced Katie Cotton as Apple‘s head of public relations. Cotton stepped down from the role last year after an 18-year run. Dowling, a 12-year veteran of the company, was named interim head of PR about six months ago. Dowling is known to be more open and friendly with the press than was Cotton, possibly because of his background. Before joining the company, he was a producer and the Silicon Valley bureau chief for CNBC.

    Scott Forstall stands to make a windfall as an advisor to Snapchat, suggests a leaked email from that Sony Pictures hack that shows Snapchat set aside .11 percent of its stock for the former Apple head of iOS. Indeed, if Forstall completes his two-year vesting schedule (it kicked off in February 2014), his stake could be worth at least $16.5 million, given the $15 billion valuation that Snapchat is believed to currently wield. TechCrunch has the story here.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    Microsoft just took Android’s future out of Google’s hands.

    —–

    Detours

    Why CEO pay reform failed.

    Last month was the hottest March worldwide since record keeping began in 1880.

    Let your mind wander. It’s good for you.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    “Game of Thrones” Horn Mug. (Pretty good, no?)

  • StrictlyVC: April 16, 2015

    Hi, everyone, hope your Thursday is off to a great start.

    If you missed yesterday’s newsletter (we chatted with Peter Denious of FLAG Capital Management about the 56 “unicorns” in his portfolio, and why they’re starting to make him nervous), it’s here.

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    It may be that few who’ve ordered an Apple Watch will receive it by the official launch date of April 24th. At least, Apple quietly removed the date from its site last night, reports 9to5mac.

    This morning, Yahoo and Microsoft announced an amended search relationship that keeps the basic framework of their original, 10-year deal in place while giving both companies — and primarily Yahoo — more autonomy, reports Search Engine Land.

    —–

    Heads Up: Navdy Raises $20 Million Series A Round

    Navdy, a 20-person, San Francisco-based company, has spent the last two years working on a head-up display that can be installed on the dashboard of any car and aims to make driving safer by getting people to look ahead at the road, rather than down at their phones.

    Its vision is about to be fulfilled, too. After taking more than 17,000 pre-orders for the product on its site, amounting to more than $6 million in sales, the company says it’s ready to start shipping the first version of the Navdy to customers in the second half of this year. (Pre-orders cost $299; the device will retail for $499.) In fact, investors are so excited about the company’s future that they’ve just given the company $20 million in Series A funding.

    Earlier this week, we spoke with Navdy founder and CEO Doug Simpson to learn more. Our chat has been edited for length.

    You’ve sold a lot of a product that hasn’t shipped yet. Did we miss your Kickstarter campaign, or did Navdy do this exclusively through its site?

    It was all done on our own site. We wanted to have more control over the user experience, and we have a [fun, product demonstration] video that’s done well, with more than 1.4 million views – that’s a big success factor. It’s a problem that people can identify with, and it’s an experience that feels magical, and I think that came across in the video and people got excited about it.

    How will big will the product run be, and did you always intend to begin shipping in the second half of this year?

    It was not always the plan. We were targeting the first half the year, but the preorder campaign was way more successful than we thought it would be, which made things more difficult, including [regarding] the supply chain. We’ve also continued to [integrate feedback] from a lot of usability testing and made iterations that have taken longer than we expected, but the result is that we’ve made some great improvements in the product. It was a difficult decision to disappoint people with a delay, but it would be worst to disappoint them with the product itself.

    As for production capacity, it will take less than a month to get through the orders we have now; after that, we’ll be producing between 20,000 to 30,000 units per month.

    And where will they sell?

    From a channel perspective, we’ll be able to take orders online this year, and next year, we’ll roll out to other channels, including traditional consumer retailers like Best Buy. We don’t have anything to announce, but the number of retailers and distributors who’ve [reached out out to us] is over 2,000.

    You’ve probably gotten a lot of feedback regarding which apps people want Navdy to include and those they don’t. Have you made any big changes based on that feedback?

    Not really. Our original plan was to focus on three use case: navigation; communication – meaning call control and text messages; and music control, and the feedback we’ve had is that those are the categories that are important to customers. Music control is a lower priority than the first two, so that’s helped us prioritize our development efforts.

    The obvious concern with Navdy is that it will be rendered obsolete by newer cars that have this kind of technology baked in.

    One of the surprises of the pre-order campaign is that lots of OEMS have already started contacting us about partnering. That’s always been our strategy, though we thought it would take time to get their interest. It will be a long process, but either way, we always plan to offer a direct-to-consumer product, too.

    What proof you have that your product will make driving safer?

    As part of user testing, we’ve taken a look at cognitive upload, the distraction of interacting with our product versus the phone. We’re also working with insurance companies and car companies on some of those aspects as well. There’s a lot of evidence to support that head-up display technology itself — developed by the military and used now by all commercial airlines – is safer.

    What’s next? Is there a product line in the pipeline?

    Yes, we really want to focus on making the in-car experience great, and we think we can expand beyond just this initial product, but right now, we’re very focused on [the first version] and the second version will build on that. I can’t really share more than that right now, though.

    —–

    New Fundings

    Appirio, an 8.5-year-old, San Francisco-based company that helps companies migrate to Salesforce, Workday and other cloud services companies, has raised $35 million in a still-open round led by Fidelity Management & Research Co. To date, the company has raised $111 million altogether, including from General Atlantic, GGV Capital, Sequoia Capital and Salesforce. Venture Capital Dispatch has the story here.

    Billtrust, a 14-year-old, Trenton, N.J.-based payment cycle management company, has raised $25 million in a new funding led by Goldman Sachs Private Capital, with participation from the company’s earlier backer Bain Capital Ventures.

    CurrencyFair, a six-year-old, Dublin, Ireland-based peer-to-peer currency transfer service, has raised $10.7 million in fresh funding led by Octopus Investments, with participation from earlier backer Frontline Ventures. The company has now raised at least $15.4 million altogether, shows Crunchbase.

    Frenzoo, a 7.5-year-old, Hong Kong-based 3D mobile game company, has raised $1 million in seed funding led by existing investors Fresco Capital, K5 Ventures and Anshe Chung. The company has now raised roughly $3 million altogether. The outlet e27 has more here.

    GreenLancer, a four-year-old, Detroit, Mi.-based solar design and permitting company, has raised $5 million in Series B funding from unnamed new and existing investors. The company had previously raised $500,000 from Bizdom, Start Garden, Blue Water Angels, and Northern Michigan Angels, shows Crunchbase.

    Jawbone, the 16-year-old, San Francisco-based maker of audio and wearable technologies, has reportedly raised $300 million from investment giant BlackRock at about a $3 billion valuation. The round closes as the company unveils two new fitness tracking bands and prepares to ship a third next week. (More about those here.)

    Kujiale, a 1.5-year-old, Hangzhou, China-based home decoration and furnishing online information and design platform, has raised $10 million in Series B funding led by GGV Capital, with participation from Matrix Partners, IDG Capital Partners, Yunqi Partners, and others. China Money Network has a bit more here.

    LocalOye, a two-year-old, Mumbai, India-based mobile marketplace for hiring local service professionals, has raised $5 million in Series A funding from Tiger Global Management and Lightspeed Venture Partners. The company had previously raised seed funding from local angel investors, including Sachin Bhatia, the cofounder of MakeMyTrip.

    Number26, a two-year-old, Berlin, Germany-based startup that lets users create a banking account in minutes from their smartphone, and provides them with a range of services like push notifications (as well as a traditional credit card), has raised $10.6 million in Series A fund led by Peter Thiel’s Valar Ventures, with participation from Swiss investor Daniel Aegerter and earlier backers Earlybird Venture Capital and Redalpine Venture Partners. The deal represents Valar Ventures’ second investment in a European fintech startup, notes VentureBeat.

    Maaxi, a nearly two-year-old, London-based iPhone and Android app that lets users order a black cab ride that’s then shared with others traveling on a similar route, has raised an undisclosed amount of seed funding from banking heir Nat Rothschild. More here.

    NSS Labs, a 24-year-old, Carlsbad, Ca.-based security research and testing organization, has raised $7 million in new funding from Chevron Technology Ventures and earlier investor LiveOak Venture Partners. LiveOak provided the company with $4 million in Series A funding in late 2013, shows Crunchbase.

    Ola, a four-year-old, Mumbai, India-based cab-hailing service, has officially announced that it has raised $400 million in Series E funding led by DST Global, with participation from GIC, Falcon Edge Capital, and earlier backers SoftBank, Tiger Global Management, Steadview Capital and Accel Partners. The company is now valued at $2.5 billion. (If this all sounds familiar, it’s because reports of the deal, which we’ve included in past newsletters, began leaking in early March.)

    Ortho Kinematics, a nine-year-old, Austin, Tex.-based diagnostic technology company focused on spine imaging informatics, has raised $9.6 million in Series C funding from Medtronic, TEXO Ventures, MB Venture Partners and other previous and new investors.

    Peak, a three-year-old, London-based maker of brain-training games and apps, has raised $7 million in Series A funding led by Creandum, with participation from earlier backers DN Capital, London Venture Partners and Qualcomm Ventures. The company has now raised $10 million altogether.

    Pepperdata, a three-year-old, Sunnyvale, Ca.-based company whose software runs on existing Hadoop clusters to give operators predictability, capacity, and visibility for their Hadoop jobs, has raised $15 million in Series B funding led by Wing Venture Partners, with participation Citi Ventures, Silicon Valley Data Capital, and earlier backers Signia Ventures and Webb Investment Network. The company has now raised roughly $20 million altogether.

    Plae, a three-year-old, San Francisco-based online children’s shoes retailer, has raised $7 million in Series A financing led by Partech Ventures, with participation from Cherubic Ventures, Finn CapitalFloodgate, Western Technology Investment and numerous angel investors.

    Sprig, a two-year-old, San Francisco-based mobile application that helps users find and order healthy meals and have them delivered quickly, has raised $45 million in Series B funding led by Social+Capital Partnership, with participation from earlier investor Greylock Partners. According to Crunchbase, the company has now raised $56.7 million altogether, including from Accel Partners, Battery Ventures, MHS Capital, and Great Oaks Venture Capital.

    StemBioSys, a five-year-old, San Antonio, Tex.-based company that’s developing proprietary stem cell technologies for the regenerative medicine market, has raised $8 million in Series A funding led by Targeted Technology Fund, with the rest of the capital coming from more than 50 angel investors.

    Tray.io, a three-year-old, London-based company whose platform promises to makes it easy for anyone to build and share SaaS integrations, has raised $2.2 million in seed funding led by True Ventures, with participation from Redpoint Ventures and Angelpad. The company has now raised just less than $3 million altogether, reports TechCrunch.

    Virtual Reality Co., an L.A. firm that’s been working on several immersive entertainment offerings that involve a stereoscopic headset display, is currently raising nearly $23 million in early funding, reports the WSJ.

    Vlocity, a year-old, San Francisco-based cloud startup, has raised $42 million led by Salesforce Ventures, with participation from Accenture. ZDNet has much more here.

    —–

    IPOs

    AshleyMadison, a dating website for terrible spouses, wants to pursue an IPO in London this year, after its parent company failed with a previous IPO attempt in Canada. “Europe is the only region where we have a real chance of doing an IPO” because of its more liberal attitudes toward infidelity, Christoph Kraemer, its head of international relations, tells Bloomberg.

    Etsy, the Brooklyn-based online marketplace for handmade and vintage goods, went public this morning, and its shares opened at $31 — nearly double their pricing last night at $16. More here.

    Virtu Financial, the high-speed trading firm, also went public this morning. After pricing its shares at $19 last night — the high end of their projected range — they’re right now trading at $22.

    —–

    Exits

    Volo, a German startup that lets users order take-out from restaurants that don’t traditionally offer it, has been acquired for undisclosed terms byRocket Internet, which just days ago announced its participation in the Series A funding of a Volo competitor called Take Eat Easy. TechCrunch has more here.

    —–

    People

    Longtime Yahoo executive and former Hightail CEO Brad Garlinghouse has joined Ripple Labs as its COO. More here.

    Ray Kurzweil, Google’s 67-year-old director of engineering, intends to live a very long time, reportedly eating a focused breakfast of berries (85 calories), smoked salmon and mackerel (100 calories), dark chocolate infused with espresso (170 calories), vanilla soy milk (100 calories) and porridge (150-350 calories). He also apparently spends $1,000 on a daily diet of 100 supplemental pills that target specific functions of the body. More here

    Business Insider looks at why Snapchat‘s stealthy real estate moves are worrying small business owners in Venice, Ca.

    One week after GetSatisfaction cofounder Lane Becker publicly revealed that he’d long ago lost the company to venture capitalists, another CEO has opened up about his “tactical mistake” in accepting venture funding.

    Ted Ullyot, Facebook’s top lawyer before stepping down in 2013, has joined venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz as its first partner to focus on policy and regulatory affairs. Fortune has the story here.

    —–

    Happenings

    Our friend Semil Shah is cohosting what looks like a strong conference about the on-demand economy on May 19 in San Francisco. Guest speakers include Postmates CEO Bastian Lehmann, DoorDash CEO Tony Xu, and investor Sherwin Pishevar of Sherpa Ventures, among others. You can learn much more about it here.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    Google said yesterday that it’s readying a challenge to the EU’s antitrust case against it. But Recode sources who are familiar with earlier EU antitrust cases say Google’s best bet is to settle and soon.

    Clever. Snapchat has been using its own app with locale-specific features to recruit from a handful of companies, including Uber.

    —–

    Detours

    The man who makes the funniest people even funnier.

    The best — and the 10 worst — jobs of 2015.

    If it’s any consolation, this German shepherd can’t get her kid to take a nap, either.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    Sporty “smart” glasses you might actually want.

  • Heads Up: Navdy Raises $20 Million Series A Round

    Navdy-Projectin-HUD4Navdy, a 20-person, San Francisco-based company, has spent the last two years working on a head-up display that can be installed on the dashboard of any car and aims to make driving safer by getting people to look ahead at the road, rather than down at their phones.

    Its vision is about to be fulfilled, too. After taking more than 17,000 pre-orders for the product on its site, amounting to more than $6 million in sales, the company says it’s ready to start shipping the first version of the Navdy to customers in the second half of this year. (Pre-orders cost $299; the device will retail for $499.) In fact, investors are so excited about the company’s future that they’ve just given the company $20 million in Series A funding.

    Earlier this week, we spoke with Navdy founder and CEO Doug Simpson to learn more. Our chat has been edited for length.

    You’ve sold a lot of a product that hasn’t shipped yet. Did we miss your Kickstarter campaign, or did Navdy do this exclusively through its site?

    It was all done on our own site. We wanted to have more control over the user experience, and we have a [fun, product demonstration] video that’s done well, with more than 1.4 million views – that’s a big success factor. It’s a problem that people can identify with, and it’s an experience that feels magical, and I think that came across in the video and people got excited about it.

    How will big will the product run be, and did you always intend to begin shipping in the second half of this year?

    It was not always the plan. We were targeting the first half the year, but the preorder campaign was way more successful than we thought it would be, which made things more difficult, including [regarding] the supply chain. We’ve also continued to [integrate feedback] from a lot of usability testing and made iterations that have taken longer than we expected, but the result is that we’ve made some great improvements in the product. It was a difficult decision to disappoint people with a delay, but it would be worst to disappoint them with the product itself.

    As for production capacity, it will take less than a month to get through the orders we have now; after that, we’ll be producing between 20,000 to 30,000 units per month.

    And where will they sell?

    From a channel perspective, we’ll be able to take orders online this year, and next year, we’ll roll out to other channels, including traditional consumer retailers like Best Buy. We don’t have anything to announce, but the number of retailers and distributors who’ve [reached out out to us] is over 2,000.

    You’ve probably gotten a lot of feedback regarding which apps people want Navdy to include and those they don’t. Have you made any big changes based on that feedback?

    Not really. Our original plan was to focus on three use case: navigation; communication – meaning call control and text messages; and music control, and the feedback we’ve had is that those are the categories that are important to customers. Music control is a lower priority than the first two, so that’s helped us prioritize our development efforts.

    The obvious concern with Navdy is that it will be rendered obsolete by newer cars that have this kind of technology baked in.

    One of the surprises of the pre-order campaign is that lots of OEMS have already started contacting us about partnering. That’s always been our strategy, though we thought it would take time to get their interest. It will be a long process, but either way, we always plan to offer a direct-to-consumer product, too.

    What proof you have that your product will make driving safer?

    As part of user testing, we’ve taken a look at cognitive upload, the distraction of interacting with our product versus the phone. We’re also working with insurance companies and car companies on some of those aspects as well. There’s a lot of evidence to support that head-up display technology itself — developed by the military and used now by all commercial airlines – is safer.

    What’s next? Is there a product line in the pipeline?

    Yes, we really want to focus on making the in-car experience great, and we think we can expand beyond just this initial product, but right now, we’re very focused on [the first version] and the second version will build on that. I can’t really share more than that right now, though.

  • StrictlyVC: April 15, 2016

    Happy Wednesday, everyone!

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    Google was formally accused in a letter this morning by the European Commission of “abusing its dominant position in the markets for general internet search services” in Europe by “systematically favouring its own comparison shopping product in its general search results pages. The Commission has also formally opened a separate antitrust investigation into Google’s mobile operating system Android. Google has already issued a statement explaining why it “strongly” disagrees with the letter.

    Nokia has announced plans to acquire rival telecom equipment maker Alcatel-Lucent for $16.6 billion in shares. More here.

    Yahoo is reportedly about to acquire Foursquare for around $900 million. TechCrunch has the story here.

    —–

    FLAG’s Peter Denious: “It’s a Good Time to Be Asking Questions”

    Roughly one year ago, FLAG Capital Management, the limited partnership, revealed that after 20 years, Diana Frazier would step down from her role as co-head of U.S. venture capital, and that Peter Denious, who formerly headed the firm’s emerging markets efforts, would assume her role.

    Denious has been fairly quiet since then, possibly because the move came about as FLAG – which has backed Accel Partners, Andreessen Horowitz, Redpoint Ventures, Spark Capital and Union Square Ventures, among others — was beginning to raise its ninth fund of funds.

    Denious still declines to discuss that effort, but he did talk with us this week about his observations – and concerns – about the current state of the venture industry. Here’s part of that conversation, edited for length.

    You recently created a presentation called “Venture Portfolio Management in the Age of the Unicorn,” stating that FLAG has exposure to 56 so-called unicorns across 100 positions but suggesting that you have concerns about whether investors are taking enough money out of those deals. Are you talking with them about it?

    We talk with them pretty openly and actively about it. We’ve always been big believers that you have to be both a great investor who can attract world-class entrepreneurs, as well as be a world-class portfolio manager.

    It’s easy for VCs operating inside partnerships to get involved in their 10 or so investments, but it’s important for somebody to be thinking about the dynamics of generating returns, too. It’s a piece that we think is relevant in a time when things are up and to the right.

    Given the number of secondary shops to descend on Silicon Valley in the last couple of years, I’d guess that plenty of firms are selling portions of their stakes. What are you seeing?

    These are case by case situations. Obviously, we’ve looked into our portfolio and across those exposures, and where the VC has an embedded return of at least 10x, we’ve been seeing them take chips off the table. We think as long as managers are having the discussion, they’ll arrive at the right answer.

    Are you concerned by how few companies are going public, relative to the number of richly funded late-stage companies we’re seeing?

    I don’t think that each of whatever the number of agreed-upon unicorns that we’re seeing will do well. Some will be severely tested when the capital runs dry, and anyone who says otherwise must be wearing a pretty strong pair of rose-colored glasses.

    By the same token, the amount of transformation and disruption in these companies’ respective industries is truly amazing. I do think there’s a subset of these companies that deserve to be very big. Do they deserve to be $50 billion, $100 billion [in value]? That’s subject to debate, but many will be very profitable if they aren’t already.

    So you’re more troubled by valuations than underlying business models.

    In most cases, we don’t have a business model problem. We don’t see a lot of nonsense, as with the last [late ‘90s] cycle. What’s debatable is valuation and are people paying too much for growth as these businesses scale, and I think that’s all to be determined. Who are we to say that this company at that valuation is too low or too high?

    We’re typically early-stage and not growth or late-stage investors and part of the reason we don’t invest there is because as you move later and later on the continuum, you’re taking more of the valuation risk. I don’t think anyone would question the 10 most highly valued unicorns. The question is whether the premiums being paid for their growth is justified, and again, only time will tell. I do think that late-stage and crossover ventures are the most at risk, but that’s what they get paid to do.

    But you anticipate a day of reckoning?

    With respect to the pool of these late-stage companies, one can argue that so much late-stage capital has allowed for more unicorns to be created than would otherwise be the case. When that capital goes away, you’ll see more exits at the sub-$1 billion level.

    Some [may go public.] I think it’s too early to draw too many conclusions about IPOs, which were down in the first quarter; we’ll know more in the next few quarters. But it’s a good time to be asking questions. I do think there will be a day of reckoning.

    —–

    New Fundings

    99designs, a seven-year-old, San Francisco-based online graphic design marketplace, has raised $10 million in Series B funding led by Recruit Strategic Partners, with participation from earlier investor Accel Partners. The company has now raised $45 million altogether, shows Crunchbase.

    Acorns, a three-year-old, Newport Beach, Ca.-based finance company that allows individuals to round up purchases and automatically invest the change, has raised $23 million in Series C funding co-led by Greycroft Partners and e.ventures, with participation from Sound VenturesGarland Capital, and MATH Venture Partners. To date, Acorns has raised $32 million.

    Bedrock Data, a three-year-old, Boston-based data integration platform for businesses, has raised $3.1 million in Series A funding led by .406 Ventures, with participation from Boston Syndicates, Maiden Lane, and Visible Measures CEO Brian Shin. BostInno has more here.

    Benchling, a nearly three-year-old, San Francisco-based platform that makes it easy to edit, analyze, and collaborate on DNA sequences, has raised $5 million funding led by Andreessen Horowitz, with participation from Thrive Capital. Benchling had previously raised an undisclosed amount of seed funding from backers that include Y Combinator, Rock Health, FF Angel, SV Angel, Tim Draper, Geoff Ralston, Kevin Mahaffey, and Matt Huang.

    CrossChx, a three-year-old, Columbus, Oh.-based company whose software helps reduce medical errors by identifying patients via fingerprint scan, has raised $15 million in Series B funding led by Khosla Ventures, with participation from earlier investor Drive Capital. The company has now raised $20 million altogether.

    Grofers, a 1.5-year-old, Gurgaon, India-based startup that provides quick delivery of products from local brick-and-mortar merchants, has raised $35 million Sequoia Capital and Tiger Capital, just two months after the same investors provided the company with $10 million in Series A funding. Grofers has now raised $45.5 million altogether. TechCrunch has more here.

    Innocrin Pharmaceuticals, a 15-year-old, Durham, N.C.-based clinical-stage pharmaceutical company developing small-molecule inhibitors to treat certain breast and prostate cancers, has raised $28 million in Series D funding led by Eshelman Ventures, with participation from earlier backers Novartis Venture Fund, Lilly Ventures, Hatteras Venture Partners, Intersouth Partners, and A&B Equity Holdings.

    LovetheSign, a 2.5-year-old, Milan, Italy-based home design e-commerce platform, has raised roughly $4 million in Series A funding led by United Ventures, with participation from unnamed angel investors from the Italian fashion and design industry. TechCrunch has more here.

    OnePlus, a two-year-old, Shenzhen, China-based smartphone maker that offers high-end phones at less than half the price of flagship models by Samsung and Apple, is in funding talks with Silicon Valley venture capitalists to help double its workforce, reports Bloomberg. Co-founder Carl Pei isn’t sharing how much the company wants to raise; he says “the most important part is access to experience and senior-level talent that will help us scale further.”

    PepperTap, a six-month-old, Gurgaon, India-based on-demand grocery delivery service, has raised $10 million in Series A from SAIF Partnersand from Sequoia Capital, which invested a $1.2 million in seed funding in the startup last month, reports TechCrunch. If it seems like on-demand grocery startups in India are suddenly awash in funding, it isn’t your imagination. In addition to Grofers (see above), ZopNow, featured in yesterday’s newsletter, also just received funding ($10 million, led by Dragoneer Investment Group).

    Poachable, a year-old, Seattle-based anonymous talent marketplace (users tell Poachable about themselves and it gauges employers’ interest without revealing their identify), has raised $750,000 in seed funding from Vulcan Capital and angel investors, including former Drugstore.com CEO Dawn Lepore.

    PolicyBazaar, a seven-year-old Gurgaon, India-based online insurance policy aggregator, has raised roughly $40 million (Rs 248 crore) in Series D funding from PremjiInvest, the personal investment vehicle of Wipro chairman Azim Premji, among other new and existing backers, including Tiger Global, Ribbit Capital, Steadview Capital and ABG Capital. VCCircle has more here.

    RetailNext, a 7.5-year-old, San Jose, Ca.-based maker of in-store retail analytics, has raised a whopping $125 million in growth funding led by Activant Capital Group, with participation from earlier backers August Capital, StarVest Partners, Nokia Growth Partners, Commerce Ventures, American Express, Pereg Ventures and Qualcomm Ventures. Siguler Guff & Company also joined the round as a first-time investor. The company has now raised $184 million altogether.

    Skyport Systems, a two-year-old, Mountain View, Ca.-based enterprise security company, has raised $30 million in Series B funding led by Index Ventures, with participation from Intel Capital and earlier backer Sutter Hill Ventures. The company has now raised $37 million altogether.

    TouchBistro, a 3.5-year-old, Toronto, Ontario-based iPad-based restaurant point-of-sale system enabling owners to manage reservations and take orders instantly, has raised $6 million in Series A funding, including from Just Eat, a publicly traded, U.K.-based online marketplace for restaurant delivery. Other backers include Difference CapitalKensington Capital Partners and Relay Ventures. The company has now raised roughly $12 million altogether.

    UniKey, a five-year-old, Winter Park, Fl.-based smart lock maker, has raised $10 million in Series A funding from Asset Management VenturesAXCIT, Broadway Angels, CBRE, ff Venture Capital, Samsung Ventures, Haas Portman, Oriza Ventures and other, unnamed investors. According to TechCrunch, the company had raised $2.9 million in seed funding. More here.

    WorldViz, a 13-year-old, Santa Barbara, Ca.-based virtual-reality company whose platform helps enterprise customers to develop their own VR content, has raised an undisclosed amount of funding from Intel Capital. VentureBeat has more here.

    Yoyo, a two-year-old, London-based mobile wallet startup that focuses primarily on university campuses, has raised $10 million in Series A funding led by the Imperial College-affiliated Imperial Innovations, reports Business Insider. Imperial Innovations had also provided the company with $1.2 million in seed funding in 2013. Other investors in the new round include angel investors, including Philip Riese, former president of American Express consumer cards.

    —–

    New Funds

    Dentsu, the 113-year-old, Tokyo-based advertising powerhouse that has struggled to expand internationally, has just established a venture capital fund, Dentsu Ventures Global Fund I, with 5 billion yen (roughly $42 million). The fund will target companies in U.S., Europe and Asia, says the company.

    New Enterprise Associates, the 38-year-old venture firm, has closed its 15th fund with $2.8 billion, as well as closed a co-investment fund of $350 million to invest alongside the main fund in growth deals. Together, the two funds top the $3 billion fund that Technology Crossover Ventures raised in 2007 (It remains the largest single venture fund ever raised, according to industry tracker Dow Jones VentureSource.) NEA commits around 70 percent of its capital to IT deals and another 30 percent to healthcare.

    MAB Capital Management, a private equity group led by beverage entrepreneur Marc Bushala, has created a $50 million fund to invest in early-stage beverage businesses, reports VentureWire. The new fund, Liquid Asset Brands Innovation Fund I, plans to invest between $3 million and $10 million in early-stage U.S.-based beverage businesses that are already generating revenue.

    Menlo Ventures has closed its 12th fund with $400 million, the same size as its previous fund. Two of its six general partners, Doug Carlisle, who joined the firm in 1982, and John Jarve, who joined in 1985, will begin to retire after this fund, reports Venture Capital Dispatch. More here.

    Viola Private Equity has raised $250 million for the firm’s second growth-stage fund targeting technology companies based in Israel. GeekTime has more here.

    —–

    IPOs

    Shopify, a nine-year-old, Ottawa, Ontario-based commerce platform that allows anyone to sell online via a professional-looking online storefront and Shopify’s payment solutions, has registered plans to raise up to $100 million in an IPO. According to Crunchbase, the company has raised $122 million from investors over the year, including from Felicis Ventures(which isn’t listed on the filing), Georgian Partners (which owns 5.9 percent), Bessemer Venture Partners (30.3 percent), FirstMark Capital (11.9 percent), Insight Venture Partners (not listed on the filing), and OMERS Ventures (6.1 percent).

    —–

    Exits

    BlaBlaCar, a nine-year-old, Paris-based car-sharing site that connects drivers with empty seats and paying passengers to offset distance travel costs, is acquiring the German group Carpooling.com, its main European rival, as well as Hungary-based AutoHop, reports the Financial Times. According to its report, the “combined entity will make BlaBlaCar the leading ride-sharing service in Europe, where it will control more than a 90 per cent share of large markets such as Germany, Spain and Italy. It will also create one of the world’s biggest ride-sharing services with 20 million users across 18 markets.”

    Datazen, a 13-year-old, Toronto-based mobile business intelligence and data visualization service, has been acquired by Microsoft for undisclosed terms. ZDNet has more here.

    LinX Computational Imaging, a four-year-old, Israel-based company that develops and markets miniature cameras for tablets and smartphones, has been acquired by Apple for around $20 million, suggests the WSJ.

    Segway, the 14-year-old, Bedford, New Hampshire transportation company, has been acquired — for a third time — selling to three-year-old, Beijing, China-based Ninebot, a company whose remarkably similar self-balancing robotic scooters have just attracted $80 million in fresh funding from Xiaomi, Sequoia Capital, and Shunwei Foundation. The companies will reportedly remain separate for now. Bloomberg has more here.

    Temasek Holdings, the Singapore-based government-owned investment firm, has completed its acquisition of SVB India Finance, a debt venture firm run by Silicon Valley Bank, for roughly $48 million. The newly rebranded unit will be called InnoVen Capital India. The outlet e27 has more here.

    —–

    People

    Annabelle Long, managing partner of Bertelsmann Asia Investmentstalks with Venture Capital Dispatch about the roles played by former employees of Alibaba, Tencent and Baidu and the heated pace of investment in China. (As the article notes, China’s tech sector raised $7.2 billion in private funding deals last year, compared to $1.6 billion in 2013, according to the Centre for Asia Private Equity Research.)

    Mark Pincus, who recently returned to Zynga as CEO, receives a scathing write-up in the San Francisco Chronicle, which suggests he’s back at the company because “no one could stop him.”

    —–

    Data

    Last year, only 11 percent of the tech IPOs were profitable; that’s less than the 13 percent of unprofitable tech IPOs that hit the market 2000. The Information has more here (subscribers only).

    Surprise: According to Pew Research Center, Facebook remains the most used social media site among American teens ages 13 to 17, and boys visit the site more often than girls.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    The biggest thing in app making: small packages of code.

    —–

    Detours

    Junk food with Michelin-style plating.

    If you have to ask where your invite is, you’re not on the A-List.

    A super-gross diagnostic tool that could save your life.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    Vermont Maple Sriracha. We have absolutely no idea how we’d use this, but you might.

  • Big-League LP: “It’s a Good Time to Be Asking Questions”

    Peter DeniousRoughly one year ago, FLAG Capital Management, the limited partnership, revealed that after 20 years, Diana Frazier would step down from her role as co-head of U.S. venture capital, and that Peter Denious, who formerly headed the firm’s emerging markets efforts, would assume her role.

    Denious has been fairly quiet since then, possibly because the move came about as FLAG – which has backed Accel Partners, Andreessen Horowitz, Redpoint Ventures, Spark Capital and Union Square Ventures, among others — was beginning to raise its ninth fund of funds.

    Denious still declines to discuss that effort, but he did talk with us this week about his observations – and concerns – about the current state of the venture industry. Here’s part of that conversation, edited for length.

    You recently created a presentation called “Venture Portfolio Management in the Age of the Unicorn,” stating that FLAG has exposure to 56 so-called unicorns across 100 positions but suggesting that you have concerns about whether investors are taking enough money out of those deals. Are you talking with them about it?

    We talk with them pretty openly and actively about it. We’ve always been big believers that you have to be both a great investor who can attract world-class entrepreneurs, as well as be a world-class portfolio manager.

    It’s easy for VCs operating inside partnerships to get involved in their 10 or so investments, but it’s important for somebody to be thinking about the dynamics of generating returns, too. It’s a piece that we think is relevant in a time when things are up and to the right.

    Given the number of secondary shops to descend on Silicon Valley in the last couple of years, I’d guess that plenty of firms are selling portions of their stakes. What are you seeing?

    These are case by case situations. Obviously, we’ve looked into our portfolio and across those exposures, and where the VC has an embedded return of at least 10x, we’ve been seeing them take chips off the table. We think as long as managers are having the discussion, they’ll arrive at the right answer.

    Are you concerned by how few companies are going public, relative to the number of richly funded late-stage companies we’re seeing?

    I don’t think that each of whatever the number of agreed-upon unicorns that we’re seeing will do well. Some will be severely tested when the capital runs dry, and anyone who says otherwise must be wearing a pretty strong pair of rose-colored glasses.

    By the same token, the amount of transformation and disruption in these companies’ respective industries is truly amazing. I do think there’s a subset of these companies that deserve to be very big. Do they deserve to be $50 billion, $100 billion [in value]? That’s subject to debate, but many will be very profitable if they aren’t already.

    So you’re more troubled by valuations than underlying business models.

    In most cases, we don’t have a business model problem. We don’t see a lot of nonsense, as with the last [late ‘90s] cycle. What’s debatable is valuation and are people paying too much for growth as these businesses scale, and I think that’s all to be determined. Who are we to say that this company at that valuation is too low or too high?

    We’re typically early-stage and not growth or late-stage investors and part of the reason we don’t invest there is because as you move later and later on the continuum, you’re taking more of the valuation risk. I don’t think anyone would question the 10 most highly valued unicorns. The question is whether the premiums being paid for their growth is justified, and again, only time will tell. I do think that late-stage and crossover ventures are the most at risk, but that’s what they get paid to do.

    But you anticipate a day of reckoning?

    With respect to the pool of these late-stage companies, one can argue that so much late-stage capital has allowed for more unicorns to be created than would otherwise be the case. When that capital goes away, you’ll see more exits at the sub-$1 billion level.

    Some [may go public.] I think it’s too early to draw too many conclusions about IPOs, which were down in the first quarter; we’ll know more in the next few quarters. But it’s a good time to be asking questions. I do think there will be a day of reckoning.

  • StrictlyVC: April 14, 2015

    Hi, happy Tuesday, everyone!

    We know some of you didn’t receive yesterday’s email or else had trouble opening the links. (Sorry.) Our ESP suffered a denial-of-service attack early in the day. For those who missed the latest about our May 13 event in San Francisco (and other bits, including a job listing you might want to check out), click here.

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    Qualcomm has rejected a call for its break-up by activist investor Jana Partners, saying that “synergies provided by our business model create more value for stockholders than could be created through alternative corporate structures.”

    Bad news for Google: Apple has managed to sell more Apple Watches in a single day than the number of Android Wear smartwatches sold in an entire year.

    Rakuten‘s shopping spree looks to continue. According to TechCrunch, the Japanese conglomerate may soon shell out $580 million for the online celebrity news site PopSugar. According to Crunchbase, the nine-year-old company has raised roughly $46 million from investors, including NBC Universal, Sequoia Capital, and Institutional Venture Partners.

    —–

    Duo Security Raises $30 Million More, Led by Redpoint

    Duo Security, a five-year-old, 100-person company that sells its cloud-based two-factor authentication software to thousands of organizations, including Facebook, Twitter, Nasa and Uber, has just raised $30 million in Series C funding led by Redpoint Ventures, with participation from Benchmark, Google Ventures, Radar Partners and True Ventures. (The Ann Arbor, Mi.-based startup has now raised around $50 million altogether.)

    Last week, we chatted the Duo Security’s cofounder and CTO, Jon Oberheide, about how his company is using mobile devices as a second form of authentication, and what comes next.

    Some major company’s information is breached every week it seems, yet there are also other two-factor authentication services out there tackling the problem. What makes yours different?

    First, we think the existing security is broken. Underlying information technology has shifted out underneath existing security technologies and they aren’t relevant anymore. In the past few decades, your security model was built within the physical walls of your organization, then people began accessing the same device but they weren’t necessarily in the building, which made phishing for those employees’ names and passwords easy. Poor hygiene across multiple sites was the problem we were trying to solve, and we succeeded in ensuring that your identification couldn’t be stolen.

    Then mobile devices came along and now everyone uses their own favorite products.

    Yes, and those mobile devices aren’t under the control of an IT administrator. You have these cloud services that are being controlled by third parties. IT departments have gone from saying “no,” to partnering with [various parties] to ensure their [devices’] secure enablement.

    And you have a new edition that you say works even better than what your customers have been using. How so?

    Our new platform edition allows companies to establish what security policies are acceptable and customize protection at the point of entry. It can stop break-ins regardless of whether hackers have a user’s name or password by analyzing a company’s policies for each log-in attempt, including the location of the user, the reputation of the IP address, and what level of device health they want to admit into their enterprises. It addresses, for example, the employee who might forget his phone at the bar. A company can require that a full encryption and screen lock [are activated] to prevent someone else rom picking it up and trying to access corporate information. Or, if you’re a domestic company whose employees primarily log-in from Starbucks, you might want to block access to China or Russia, where a lot of hackers come from. You just click a box and it’s done.

    How much more will this new edition cost customers?

    On a per user, per month basis, we currently charge $3; our platform edition wil cost $6 per user per month because we’re providing a lot more value to companies that we think justifies [the price hike].

    —–

    New Fundings

    Adallom, a three-year-old, Palo Alto, Ca.-based SaaS-based security company focused on auditing user activity and protecting users from threats in real time, has raised $30 million in Series C funding led by Hewlett-Packard Ventures and Rembrandt Venture Partners, with participation from Sequoia Capital and Index Ventures.

    Alfred Club, a 20-month-old, San Francisco-based startup that pairs people needing work with people wanting their errands handled, has raised $10 million in new funding led by New Enterprise Associates and Spark Capital, with participation from Sherpa Ventures and CrunchFund. Spark also led Alfred’s previous $2 million round.

    CapriCoast, a months-old, Bangalore, India-based online furniture store that connects its customers with manufacturers directly, has raised $1.25 million in seed funding led by Accel Partners. DealCurry has more here.

    Commeasure, a year-old, Singapore-based company that helps hotels develop their direct booking systems, has raised $1 million in seed funding led by the Singapore-based early-stage investor Jungle Ventures. VCCircle has more here.

    Docker, a five-year-old, San Francisco-based company whose open platform enables developers and system administrators to create distributed applications, has raised $95 million Series D funding led by earlier investor Insight Venture Partners. Other investors in the round include Coatue, Goldman Sachs and Northern Trust and previous investors Benchmark, Greylock Partners, Sequoia Capital, Trinity Ventures and AME Cloud Ventures. More here.

    Eaze, a 10-month-old, San Francisco-based medical marijuana on-demand delivery platform, has raised $10 million in Series A funding led by DCM Ventures, with participation from Snoop Dogg’s Casa Verde Capital (of course), 500 Startups, and earlier backer Fresh VC. Eaze had previously raised $1.5 million in a seed funding.

    FinalCode, a year-old, San Jose, Ca.-based company that makes file-encryption software, has raised $6 million in Series A funding from Japan’s Digital Arts. CRN has more here.

    Illumio, a two-year-old, Sunnyvale, Ca.-based cybersecurity company, has raised $100 million in Series C funding from BlackRock and Accel Partners, with participation from earlier backers Formation 8Andreessen Horowitz and General Catalyst Partners. To date, the company has raised $142 million altogether. Venture Capital Dispatch has more here.

    Movidius, an 8.5-year-old, San Mateo, Ca.-based fabless semiconductor company that designs compact, high-performance, ultralow power, computational imaging and vision processing chips and reference designs, has raised $40 million in Series E funding led by Summit Bridge Capital, with participation from ARCH Venture Partners, Sunny Optical Technology Group, and earlier backers Atlantic Bridge Capital, AIB Seed Capital Fund, Capital-E, DFJ Esprit and Robert Bosch Venture Capital. The company has now raised $86.5 million altogether. Silicon Angle has more here.

    Npm, a 16-month-old, Oakland, Ca.-based company that makes software for JavaScript developers, has raised $8 million in Series A funding led by Bessemer Venture Partners.

    Planet Labs, a five-year-old, San Francisco-based startup that aims to cover the Earth in tiny satellites, has raised $118 million in Series C funding led by the the International Finance Corporation, a division of the World Bank. Other participants in the round include Data Collective, and earlier backers Yuri Milner, DFJ, Capricorn Investment Group,O’Reilly Alpha Tech Ventures, Founders Fund, First Round Capital,Innovation Endeavors, AME Cloud Ventures, Industry VenturesFelicis Ventures, Lux Capital, and Ray Rothrock. TechCrunch has much more here.

    Pocket, an eight-year-old, San Francisco-based service that lets users save content from across the web to read or watch later, has raised $7 million in fresh funding led by New Enterprise Associates, with participation from Sound Ventures, a fund announced by actor Ashton Kutcher and talent manager Guy Oseary last month. Pocket has now raised $14.5 million to date. VentureBeat has more here.

    PrimeRevenue, a 12-year-old, Atlanta, Ga.-based company that sells multi-bank supply chain finance services to buyers and suppliers worldwide, has raised $80 million led by BBH Capital Partners and Battery Ventures. The company had previously raised $11.6 million, including from Battery and RRE Ventures, shows Crunchbase.

    ResiModel, a two-year-old, New York-based service that aggregates, standardizes and analyzes financial data for transactions in multifamily properties, has raised an undisclosed amount of money that brings its total amount of backing to $3.5 million. The company had previously raised nearly $2 million in debt, shows Crunchbase.

    Take Eat Easy, a two-year-old, Paris, France-based company that, like DoorDash, invites users to order food online from restaurants that don’t traditionally offer a take-out and delivery service, has raised €6 million ($6.4 million) in Series A funding from Rocket Internet, DN Capital, and Piton Capital. More here.

    Tiantian Yongche, an eight-month-old, Beijing, China-based carpool and ridesharing app, has raised an undisclosed amount of Series C funding led by Baidu, with participation from Sequoia Capital. The company claims its valuation is now close to $200 million. Baidu has been playing catch-up in the taxi app race. It has also recently invested in in 51yongche, another carpooling app, and in December, it invested in Uber, the car-booking giant. Tech in Asia has more here.

    Tonara, a 6.5-year-old, Ramat Gan, Israel-based startup behind the eponymous interactive sheet music app, has raised $5 million from Chinese Internet giant Baidu and earlier backer Carmel Ventures. The company had previously raised $4.8 million, shows Crunchbase. Techcrunch has more here.

    WhatWeLike, a a 15-month-old, Jakarta, Indonesia-based social shopping startup that focuses on local fashions, has raised an undisclosed amount of seed funding from East Ventures. Tech in Asia has more here.

    Zomato, the seven-year-old, Gurgaon, India-based online restaurant guide, has reportedly raised roughly $24.9 million from Info Edge as part of a $50 million fundraise. Zomato had also raised $60 million from Vy Capital, Info Edge and Sequoia last November. Altogether, it has raised $163 million in funding until now, reports the Economic Times.

    ZopNow, a four-year-old, Bangalore, India- based online grocery startup, has raised $10 million in new funding led by San Francisco-based Dragoneer Investment Group, with participation from earlier backers Accel Partners, Qualcomm Ventures and Times Internet. Inc42 has the story here.

    —–

    New Funds

    Yesterday, 500 Startups announced a new $10 million carveout fund, called the DistroFund, aimed at helping early-stage companies with both financial backing and support services when they are trying to land Series A funding. PandoDaily has more here.

    —–

    People

    Twitter’s former head of investor relations, Nils Erdmann, has a new job as a partner at the young secondary shop Battery East Group. TechCrunch asks him about the move here.

    Eight VC firms, including Google Ventures, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, Accel Partners, Shasta Ventures, and Redpoint Ventures, have opened or are opening offices in San Francisco’s South Park. “It’s Sand Hill, but with street art and better burritos,” Redpoint’s Ryan Sarver tells Recode.

    —–

    Data

    Of the 56 current “unicorns,” just four are led by women (and just three if you exclude Good Technology, whose path continues to appear uncertain). Almost two-thirds of the companies don’t have a woman on the board, either. Silk has the data story here.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    As vertical marketplaces rise, Craiglist is reportedly losing market share at long last.

    —–

    Detours

    How not to be a jerk while wearing the Apple Watch.

    Why everyone went nuts over Hillary Clinton’s new logo.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    Whoops. Looks like Johnny Walker hired the wrong branding agency.


StrictlyVC on Twitter