law Archives - Crunchbase News /tag/law/ Data-driven reporting on private markets, startups, founders, and investors Wed, 08 Mar 2023 21:13:21 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.5 /wp-content/uploads/cb_news_favicon-150x150.png law Archives - Crunchbase News /tag/law/ 32 32 Israeli Startups Could Face ‘Frozen’ Funding Environment Amid Political Turmoil /venture/funding-israel-startups-political-reforms/ Wed, 08 Mar 2023 20:30:26 +0000 /?p=86728 Over the last seven years, fintech has become one of Israel’s most successful startups, raising hundreds of millions of dollars to build out its HR and payroll platform.

But in late January, Papaya CEO moved the company’s funds out of Israel, citing the country’s risky business climate amid political turmoil. She joins a growing group of tech leaders alarmed about Prime Minister ‘s plans to give parliament veto powers over the Supreme Court.

Eynat Guez, co-founder and CEO of Papaya Global

Such reforms have not only triggered widespread protests , but also raise questions about the future of the country’s technology industry. The Israeli government is moving to allow the Knesset, its parliament, to appoint justices, override Supreme Court decisions, and remove the high court’s power to judge government legislation. 

“There is so much at stake here, if this reform passes,” said , a founding partner at , a seed investor based in Silicon Valley that invests in Israeli founders. This will impact “investments coming into the country, founders staying or not staying in the country.” 

Since the first vote on such reforms passed in January, the response has been swift from both tech investors and startups. Dozens of public and private tech companies they are taking funds out of the country. Guez, however, estimates that many more have done so quietly, amounting to what could be $7 billion to $10 billion in funds moved out of the country.

“It’s a new thing for the tech community to step outside the comfort zone of not being political and jumping into it and showing their force,” said Galili. 

Shuly Galili, UpWest founding partner

Since the first vote was passed in January, Galili said, this issue has dominated her calls with startup founders. 

These judicial reforms were not discussed in advance of Netanyahu’s recent election in November 2022. “You can argue whether or not the majority chose these reforms,” said Guez. “It wasn’t even discussed. It’s a surprise for us, and it seems like the majority are saying, this is not what we are after.” 

‘Significant concerns’

U.S.-based , an active investor in Israel for three decades, has had a local office there since 2007 and estimates it has in Israeli startups including , , and in the past 10 years. But in February the firm advised its portfolio of startups in a private memo to hold only .

“We are confident in the resilience of Israeli high-tech given its limited exposure to the local economy, but have significant concerns that the current climate may result in a chilling effect on non-tech foreign investment and domestic consumption in Israel that goes beyond the challenging macro environment,” the firm obtained by Israeli newspaper last month. “Our primary business concern is the continued weakening of the shekel and the smaller risk of foreign currency controls as the outflow of funds from Israeli banks continues to gather steam. While both concerns may feel exaggerated at this moment, investor and public perception can abruptly make both risks a reality.”

Moving funds

Last week, , an Israeli unicorn, announced $300 million in funding at a $10 billion valuation, but said the new funding will not be moved to Israel amid the ongoing political conflicts.

Guez, too, acted quickly after that first vote, moving Papaya Global’s funds out of Israel to Europe and the U.S. As a CEO it’s always necessary to assess business risks. But Guez went further and was public in her criticism, seeing it as her responsibility to be vocal.

The Israeli government is starting to “demolish everything that we’ve built around here,” she said. It’s almost impossible to raise a round in Israel currently, she said, because the risk level is so high. The funding environment is “completely frozen,” she said. 

In a country with internal conflicts, the Supreme Court is one of the most important institutions, she said. “Eliminating the Supreme Court — this is the end of democracy.”

Nascent industry

Crunchbase data shows startups headquartered in Israel raised close to $8.9 billion in 2022 — down from $9.8 billion in 2021, a 10% decline year over year. That contrasts with overall global funding, which fell 35% year over year in 2022. 

The billions invested in Israeli startups is a testament to its lead in cybersecurity, health, energy, agriculture and foodtech. 

In the first two months of 2023, Israel-based startups have raised more than $500 million, down 72% from funding raised in January through February 2022. 

However, the amount invested in Israeli startups is much higher if you take into account that many Israeli companies have dual headquarters or are headquartered outside of Israel.

The growth in large Israeli technology companies is a fairly recent phenomenon. Five to six years ago, when Guez started fundraising for Papaya, the overriding notion was that you could not build big companies in Israel, and that founders would have good ideas and then sell. 

In the past five years, more than $50 billion was invested in Israeli tech companies, Crunchbase data shows. And more than 30 or 40 companies went public, Guez said.

The significance of the technology industry for the Israeli economy was highlighted in a from the . High-tech exports represented over 50% of exports for the first time in 2021 — with the majority of that in high-tech services. More than 10% of Israelis work for technology companies. 

Global outlook

The Israeli technology community is international in its outlook. 

“Israel doesn’t have a local market. Israeli founders have to be global from day one,” according to Galili, who works with Israeli startups on their strategy to go to market in the U.S. Israeli startups will build their R&D in Israel but also incorporate and set up banking in the U.S. and other parts of the globe.

Israeli startups are also dependent on global investors, many of whom have set up local investment arms in Israel due to the strength of the technology industry. Galili predicts that as much as 85% of dollars invested in Israeli startups come from outside of Israel.  

What is the impact?

Founders are looking at what their alternatives are. Technology industry startups have options to relocate to almost anywhere in the world. “Everyone is discussing this,” Guez said.

For now, Galili says the talent in Israel remains a draw to keep startups in the country despite the turmoil. “Most of the impact is the uncertainty we have right now,” said Galili. 

Going forward, Israeli startups who in the past incorporated their company in Israel might decide to do so in Delaware or elsewhere to protect their intellectual capital in a country where the judicial system is not compromised. 

The current political tensions might be misunderstood as being about the political right versus the political left, Guez said, but “it’s really about the right to live in a democracy.”

Protests against Netanyahu’s plans . “As time goes by you see more and more people from the right are joining and saying, ‘This does not reflect our opinion. This is not what we voted for,’ ” Guez said.

“The general environment is that we understand that we need to unite and to fight for things that matter in this country,” she said.

Illustration:

]]>
/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/Israel.png
5 Interesting Startup Deals You May Have Missed In September: Not-So-Real People, Better Pet Food And More Bugs /ai-robotics/insect-food-legaltech-pet-lia/ Mon, 03 Oct 2022 12:30:53 +0000 /?p=85497 This is a monthly column that runs down five interesting deals every month that may have flown under the radar. Check out last month’s entry here.

September has come and gone and there’s a chill in the air as the days have gotten shorter.

Despite those shorter days, there were still plenty of interesting rounds that went to innovative startups this month, including faux pet food, more bug food and money for an AI-created virtual person.

A little creepy

There are a lot of real people in the world, but apparently some have moved on to virtual people now.

Montreal-based AI company closed a $5 million seed round led by the gaming company President as well as by “a prominent wealth adviser and by an international business magnate.” The startup has created —a virtual person created by AI which has a 3D presence with integrated movement and voice technology. She even has her own social media handles.

Search less. Close more.

Grow your revenue with all-in-one prospecting solutions powered by the leader in private-company data.

In the last year, the not-real Lia has garnered an audience of more than 300,000 and the company expects to use the new funding to grow that to more than 1 million by early 2023.

According to the company, Lia becomes increasingly smarter with every interaction she has with her fanbase, which can include discussing anything from math and philosophy to everyday chit-chat.

Although Lia27 points out she will “shy away from romantic conversations.”

Justice for all

There are few jobs as thankless as being a public defender (full disclosure, my father was a public defender for 30-plus years).

Most are overworked and underpaid, balancing several cases for those who have no other options and must face a justice system that can be daunting to even those familiar. The recently estimated that Oregon’s public defender workforce is sufficient to represent .

raised $2.2 million this month to ease some of the burden. The company—which the founders started as a school project while attending the —helps store, analyze and share video evidence, like police video. That includes transcribing video and making that text searchable, saving lawyers valuable time. The product is geared toward public defenders.

Irvine, California-based JusticeText, launched last year, now works with more than 50 public defender agencies.

The round included investment from the likes of , and even .

Better pet food

Two growing sectors right now are pet care and faux meat.

When you combine the two, you get Boulder, Colorado-based company closing a $17.5 million Series A which included investment from , and others.

The startup, which creates meat proteins through fermentation, previously had focused on plant-based pet treats but will use the new funding to push further into all pet food applications trying to reproduce the likes of chicken, fish and beef. 

Which is amazing since so many startups find it difficult to do just one of those right.

The company estimated the pet nutrition sales globally already top $100 billion and are growing at 4.5% a year, so it is not surprising the startup is looking to expand in the space.

The company will use the new cash to expand its meat protein portfolio and scale up production at a new 15,000-square-foot facility in Colorado.

Don’t smoke that

Let’s stay on plant-based meat for a minute.

Israel-based food tech startup closed a $10 million Series A led by this month to further push its cell-cultured meat closer to broad-scale production.

While a lot of companies are making faux meat, it is what BioBetter is using that caught our eye. BioBetter uses tobacco plants as “bioreactors” for creating the growth factors needed for the cellular development of cultivated meat. 

The startup said the princess could “significantly reduce the cost” of cultured meat, as well as help with its commercialization, as two of the biggest issues the industry faces are the steep costs and limited availability of growth factors.

With fewer people smoking than ever before, maybe this is good news for tobacco farmers?

More bugs

Last month, we talked about India-based , and the upcycling it does with insects, turning food waste into protein-rich animal feed.

This month, Paris-based —which also raises insects for animal and plant nutrition—raised a $250 million Series D led by . The company has raised a whopping $450 million to date, per the company.

Who knew there was so much money in insect farming?

Innovafeed also said it has already secured commercial partnerships for “volumes representing more than €1 billion over the next 10 years,” and will use its tech to develop ingredients for not just plants and animal food, but also human food.

The company will use the new funds to push geographical expansion, which includes the construction of a new production plant in Decatur, Illinois.

Illustration:

]]>
/wp-content/uploads/5_Most_Interesting.jpeg