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Zoox loses its CEO, Eventbrite is going public, and megarounds for Slack, One Medical, and Getaround
FromEquity
Currently unavailable
Zoox loses its CEO, Eventbrite is going public, and megarounds for Slack, One Medical, and Getaround
FromEquity
ratings:
Length:
27 minutes
Released:
Aug 24, 2018
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
Hello and welcome back to Equity, TechCrunch’s venture capital-focused podcast where we unpack the numbers behind the headlines.
This week we had a full house which was super great. TechCrunch's Connie Loizos and Sarah Buhr held down the fort in San Francisco along with our guest, Susan Mac Cormac, a partner at Morrison Foerster where she works on some of the most interesting deals in the private capital space. I dialed in from the home office in Providence.
It was good that we had eight hands on deck as there was more than enough news to go around. We started with the recent executive changes at Zoox, an autonomous car company that came up on the show a few weeks back when it raised $500 million.
The firm is now down its CEO after he was ousted after the round. In the founder-friendly era that we find ourselves in at the moment, this is High Drama.
Next up was the #breakingnews concerning Eventbrite, which filed to go public just before we recorded. My initial notes are here, but we're still far from knowing where the unicorn will price. That means it's hard to say much today, aside from the fact that the company appears to be in more than rude enough health for a flotation.
And then, the megarounds. There were three:
Slack is richer and more valuable than ever after raising over $400 million at a valuation of more than $7 billion. The news surprised precisely no one, but it's again amazing to see how the enterprise chat app and budding productivity platform can raise as much as it wants, whenever it wants. The new round, of course, came after Slack put $250 million in its pockets last year. (Here's some quick math on its new valuation, just for fun.)
One Medical picked up $350 million of its own, though the company doesn't get all the money. It's $220 million for One Medical itself, and $130 million for extant shareholders in the premium medical service.
Getaround raised $300 million led by SoftBank (which also invested in Slack, of course). SoftBank's 2017 and 2018 investment cadence are already the stuff of legend. How the firm will do when returns are tallied isn't settled, though some early wagers are bearing fruit as we noted on the show. Getaround faces competition from rival peer-to-peer car sharing service Turo, which also raised this year.
All that and we managed 1.7 jokes and 2.3 puns.
We'll be back in a week, and don't forget that we are coming to you live at Disrupt in about two week's time. Stay cool!
This week we had a full house which was super great. TechCrunch's Connie Loizos and Sarah Buhr held down the fort in San Francisco along with our guest, Susan Mac Cormac, a partner at Morrison Foerster where she works on some of the most interesting deals in the private capital space. I dialed in from the home office in Providence.
It was good that we had eight hands on deck as there was more than enough news to go around. We started with the recent executive changes at Zoox, an autonomous car company that came up on the show a few weeks back when it raised $500 million.
The firm is now down its CEO after he was ousted after the round. In the founder-friendly era that we find ourselves in at the moment, this is High Drama.
Next up was the #breakingnews concerning Eventbrite, which filed to go public just before we recorded. My initial notes are here, but we're still far from knowing where the unicorn will price. That means it's hard to say much today, aside from the fact that the company appears to be in more than rude enough health for a flotation.
And then, the megarounds. There were three:
Slack is richer and more valuable than ever after raising over $400 million at a valuation of more than $7 billion. The news surprised precisely no one, but it's again amazing to see how the enterprise chat app and budding productivity platform can raise as much as it wants, whenever it wants. The new round, of course, came after Slack put $250 million in its pockets last year. (Here's some quick math on its new valuation, just for fun.)
One Medical picked up $350 million of its own, though the company doesn't get all the money. It's $220 million for One Medical itself, and $130 million for extant shareholders in the premium medical service.
Getaround raised $300 million led by SoftBank (which also invested in Slack, of course). SoftBank's 2017 and 2018 investment cadence are already the stuff of legend. How the firm will do when returns are tallied isn't settled, though some early wagers are bearing fruit as we noted on the show. Getaround faces competition from rival peer-to-peer car sharing service Turo, which also raised this year.
All that and we managed 1.7 jokes and 2.3 puns.
We'll be back in a week, and don't forget that we are coming to you live at Disrupt in about two week's time. Stay cool!
Released:
Aug 24, 2018
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
Equity Monday: Edtech and insurtech stay red-hot: This morning was a somewhat odd episode of our Monday show, in that the American election is tomorrow. Still, some things happened. So, here they are: Match, Uber, Alibaba, Square, Dropbox, EA, and Roku are expected to report earnings this week. The UK's venture capital industry is even less focused on investing in diverse founders than you thought, with our own Natasha Lomas reporting that "all-ethnic teams received an average of just 1.7% of the venture capital investments made at seed, early and late stage" between 2009 and 2019. The edtech boom is lifting all boats, it seems, not just those that belong to startups. Chegg's growth is picking up media attention. Marshmallow raised $30 million for its auto-insurtech product. The insurtech market is super hot these days, after the Lemonade and Root IPOs. Tencent led $50 million into Zego, another company that wants to provide video communications services to other companies. Warre by Equity