Dailyhunt parent VerSe's valuation gets slashed 42% to $2.9B: investor note

Image Credits: Anindito Mukherjee / Bloomberg / Getty Images

Indian tech and media startup VerSe, which operates popular news aggregator Dailyhunt, is worth about 42% below its last private valuation, according to estimates by its investor 360 One. 

The wealth and asset manager disclosed in a June update to its investors that it values VerSe at $2.9 billion, according to an internal document reviewed by TechCrunch. 

The Bengaluru-headquartered startup — which counts Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan, CPP Investments, Goldman Sachs, Google, Sofina and Peak XV among its other backers — was valued at about $5 billion in a $805 million funding round it announced in April 2022. 

In the update, 360 One also disclosed that it had marked up the valuation of NSE, India’s largest exchange, to $29.9 billion, TechCrunch previously reported.

360 One and VerSe declined to comment. 

This downward valuation adjustment aligns with an ongoing global trend: Investors are marking down the worth of their startup holdings. For instance, asset manager Fidelity has reduced the value of its stakes in X, Gupshup and Discord.

Fidelity disclosed on Friday that it values its holding in X, formerly Twitter, at approximately 27.94% of its original investment. This new valuation places the Elon Musk-led social media company, which he bought for $44 billion, at $12.3 billion at the end of July. Similarly, Fidelity estimates that SaaS startup Gupshup is now worth about $541 million, down from its $1.4 billion valuation in 2021.

To be sure, VerSe has improved its financials significantly in the last two years since raising funds at a $5 billion valuation. The startup recently acquired digital marketing firm Valueleaf, a move it said would help it gain an additional $100 million in revenue.

The investor update from 360 One also covered holdings in several other startups. It valued food delivery giant Swiggy at $11.5 billion, up from its last private funding round in early 2022 at $10.7 billion. The report assigned a $4 billion valuation to Pine Labs, a merchant payments platform. Online meat and seafood retailer Licious was valued at $900 million, while edtech company upGrad had a valuation of $1.9 billion ascribed to it, TechCrunch previously reported.

startups, AI, venture capital

Poolside is raising $400M+ at a $2B valuation to build a supercharged coding co-pilot

startups, AI, venture capital

Image Credits: Viaframe / Getty Images

Paris has quickly established itself as a major European center for AI startups, and now another deal in the works could cement that position even further. 

Poolside.ai, a generative AI company based out of Paris that is building tools to speed up software development, is in the process of raising at least $400 million, on a post-money valuation of $2 billion, sources tell TechCrunch. 

Bain Capital Ventures (BCV) and DST are in talks to co-lead the round at the moment, sources tell us. BCV is a previous backer of the company, and DST is a new investor. Bain’s participation has been previously reported, with PitchBook noting this to be an estimated $450 million round.

Poolside made a splash (ahem) last August when it became yet another AI startup in the city to raise a big seed round. It picked up $126 million from backers that included, in addition to BCV, early-stage specialists like London’s Air Street, Abstraction and Scribble Ventures, and New Wave and Frst from France. Bpifrance, Felicis, Point Nine, and Redpoint were also in the round. None of the investors we contacted would comment for this story. Poolside’s CEO did not respond to our request for comment.

Mistral and H, two foundational model companies, are among those that have also raised nine-figure seed rounds ($113 million and $220 million, respectively) out of the city. The City of Light might need to be renamed the City of AI at this rate. 

Looking at the bigger picture, it feels at times like the market has gotten very overheated, very fast, for AI startups, which collectively are raising many of billions of dollars when you also include the likes of Anthropic and OpenAI. Do we need another foundational AI company, you might ask? 

There are a number of reasons why Poolside is getting this level of funding to take its own big swing at the generative AI opportunity:

Strength of the founding team and its connection to the company’s premise. Both are steeped in the world of developer tools and DevOps. One founder, CEO Jason Warner, was the CTO of GitHub and led engineering for Heroku and Canonical. The other co-founder, CTO Eiso Kant, previously founded Athenian, which had built a series of tools for developers to help them optimize how they build and work. (That company was acquired by the Linux Foundation for an undisclosed sum.) Warner was also previously a VC at Redpoint and knows the value and language of the interaction between VCs and founders. 

The problem being solved. Unlike those building foundational large language models (LLMs) that are more generalized in their approach, Poolside (for now at least) is looking at one use case in particular: helping developers work faster. This will resonate with investors and is reminiscent of a memorable essay written by Paul Graham many years ago about startup ideas, building tools that you yourself know you would need, which by default means that founders and likely other technologists should need. 

Although the likes of Mistral also have a focus on developers and developer tools, not to mention Microsoft’s adaptation of OpenAI for GitHub (indeed OpenAI is all about its APIs, which are also used by developers), there have been some notable examples of how code is one of the more problematic blind spots (again, for now at least) for more general LLMs. Right now, there is a window of opportunity to build this, and build it better than a more generalist approach. 

That’s not to say that Poolside is not also thinking big. In a three-step plan outlined on its website, it notes that eventually it hopes to work, after developers, with anyone who wants to write code and software; and then, after that, “generalize these capabilities beyond software to all other fields.” NBD!

Early signs of what they have built. What I have not seen is whether the company has released a product yet in general availability, but there is some evidence that they are working and growing (and perhaps running in private beta?). Its compute supplier, IREN, in April reported that Poolside had ramped up its cloud services deal with the company. 

Last but certainly not least, there is monetization. As one source close to the company said to me, there are many examples of AI addressing different areas of the market, but not many have clear indications — much less proof — of monetization potential. (Yes, the big deal that OpenAI inked with PwC could open the door to more enterprise business, but that might be a years-long effort; meanwhile, it remains to be seen what take-up at any enterprise might look like.)

With Poolside, however, if you consider the opportunity and scale of building co-pilot tools for developers, it may well be one of the best and most straightfoward places to apply AI, if done right. It’s a clear, large need and all computer programming has syntax, so it’s not nearly as open-ended as so many other areas where AI is being applied. Plus, it has constraints, and indications of performance, and benchmarks — a winning combination for investors and startups looking to build businesses. 

We’ll update this post as we learn more.

Creatio raises $200M at a $1.2B valuation for its no-code CRM and workflow platform

Creatio logo and team photo

Image Credits: Creatio

Creatio, the no-code CRM and workflow automation platform, on Wednesday announced that it has raised a $200 million funding round led by Sapphire Ventures. StepStone Group and current investors Volition Capital and Horizon Capital also participated in this round.

“The problem we’re solving is addressing the need of knowledge workers,” Creatio co-founder and CEO Katherine Kostereva told me. “And we’re talking about 1.7 billion people in the world [who we want to help] automate their workflows with the power of no-code.”

Image Credits: Creatio

As the demand for software continues to increase, she noted, the number of developers isn’t keeping pace. Obviously, Creatio isn’t the only company trying to fill this void, and there is no dearth of no-code tools available to businesses today. But Kostereva argues that what sets Creatio apart is that it was always architected to work at an enterprise scale.

“What we deliver to our clients is all front office: sales, customer relationship, marketing, service management processes,” she said. That means the company competes with the likes of Oracle, Salesforce, Microsoft and SAP, but Kostereva says that being smaller allows Creatio to be more agile than its larger competitors.

And, of course, because this is 2024, Creatio, too, is riding the AI wave with a copilot for its CRM users and no-code creators. “Right now, what we’re hearing from people more and more is that cloud technology built back in the beginning of the 2000s, like Salesforce, is considered more like legacy tech. Everyone is looking for new technology, cutting-edge technology — and this is exactly what Creatio delivers with our AI, no-code architectures.”

Image Credits: Creatio

The AI features include capabilities like helping sales teams score opportunities or generate emails, as well as helping the company’s no-code creators design workflows and convert text-based requirements into business rules, among various other use cases.

Kostereva stressed that machine learning-based tools have long been part of Creatio’s toolset, but generative AI has allowed the company to take this a step further.

She noted that the company is currently growing 50% year-over-year, and given that Creatio was a bootstrapped company for the longest time, it’s in its DNA to be capital efficient. But the team is now seeing an opportunity to double down and expand quickly. That means building out its AI capabilities and core no-code features, but also its partner ecosystem, which already drives half the business.

“We are thrilled to partner with CEO Katherine Kostereva and the entire Creatio team,” said Rajeev Dham, managing director at Sapphire Ventures. “Creatio’s true AI-powered no-code platform — built on a unique, composable architecture — offers exceptional flexibility and usability that empowers enterprise customers to swiftly build, deploy and personalize applications for a variety of use cases across CRM, case management and workflow automation. The power and agility of the platform combined with the team’s relentless dedication have allowed them to deliver remarkable ROI and time to value for their customers.”

Pointer of map on matrix background with digits 1 and 0

Placer.ai boosts valuation to $1.5B after quietly raising another $75M

Pointer of map on matrix background with digits 1 and 0

Image Credits: Iurii Motov / Getty Images

Location data, for better or worse, continues to be a part of the bedrock of how apps are built. Now a startup developing AI market research based on that location data, Placer.ai, has quietly raised $75 million at an expanded valuation of nearly $1.5 billion, TechCrunch has learned.

The startup provides a wide range of location-based analytics to companies in verticals like retail, events and entertainment, CPG, real estate, financial services and healthcare by combining AI with anonymized data that it sources from third-party apps.

We first became aware of the funding by way of a Form D filed in July detailing Placer’s intentions to raise $75 million. We have confirmed with the company’s CEO and CFO that it has closed the full amount, with a new valuation of $1.45 billion, up nearly 50% since its last round, a $100 million Series C made at a $1 billion valuation. 

The investment underscores the growing value of location data for businesses beyond the app publishers themselves. And, at a time when more people are aware of data protection around mobile apps, not least due to a growing number of data breaches, it also serves as a reminder of just how much data we generate through modern life.

Placer’s analytics cover general trends like foot traffic at a particular location or for a particular store — factoids like Aldi currently ranking as the fastest-growing retailer based on visits — but also more detailed data about who buys what and and when, people’s demographic profiles and more.

Such methods are a little creepy, as some have noted, but also not totally uncommon. (Others that track location data include Foursquare, Esri and many others offer location analytics.)

Like other mobile analytics firms, the startup picks up data by way of an SDK that it installs with hundreds of app publishers, as well as through other third-party sources. It describes itself as a “privacy by design” business: All of the data it uses is anonymized before it comes to Placer, the company said.

The company declined to disclose specific participants in this latest fundraise except to note that existing backers participated. PitchBook notes that real estate investment firm GEM Realty Capital is also in this most recent round. 

Overall, Placer has more than 50 investors — both firms and individuals — on its cap table. They include Josh Buckley (the former CEO of Product Hunt), WndrCo (Jeffrey Katzenberg’s investment firm), Lachy Groom, MMC Technology Ventures, Fifth Wall Ventures and Array Ventures, alongside J.M. Schapiro (CEO of Continental Realty Corp), Eliot Bencuya and Jeff Karsh of Tryperion Partners, Daniel Klein of Klein Enterprises/Sundeck Capital and Majestic Realty.

Numbers have been strong for the company. Placer’s CEO and co-founder Noam Ben-Zvi told TechCrunch in an interview that the company crossed an annual revenue run rate of $100 million in February, and it has grown 80% in the last year and expects to grow another 60% this year. It has also passed 4,300 customers (up from 1,000 in 2022 when it raised the $100 million). The list includes the likes of Sony, various city development organizations, Wegmans, and Century 21. 

“What ties them together is that they all have a stake in the physical world,” he said. 

The funding was raised based on inbound interest, CFO Dean Neese said. The plan will be to use the funding for business development and to add more features and datasets to the platform. It says it already provides users with “hundreds” of these datasets.

Placer was founded in 2018 by Ben-Zvi and fellow Israelis Zohar Bar-Yehuda (data scientist), Oded Fossfeld (CTO) and Ofir Lemel (CPO), and it was just two years later that the company faced what you might assume would be a death knell for a location analytics company: the arrival of the COVID-19 pandemic and the world turning away from physical gatherings. It turned out to be the opposite.

At an especially restricted time, Ben-Zvi said, “Our data provided a lot of visibility into what was working and what was not working.”

Having that foothold with customers meant that the company expanded its reach along with the world “reopening” for business.

While Placer has always used machine learning and inference to build more detailed profiles based on the data that they glean from apps, that has now also been a strong point with its end users, who have been given a green light to explore how to build more AI into their workflows. 

“Customers want a holistic one-stop-shop platform for market research,” he said. “They may ask themselves: Should I expand to this market? How are my competitors doing? What they want is all the underlying data that’s relevant, and all the aggregations and the tools on top. Analytics is a core ingredient.”

Zepto founders

Zepto raises $340M at a $5B valuation as India's quick-commerce market heats up

Zepto founders

Image Credits: Zepto

Indian instant delivery startup Zepto has finalized a $340 million round that values it at $5 billion, up from $3.6 billion in June and $1.4 billion last August, as the startup races to win market share in India’s contested quick-commerce market.

General Catalyst and Mars Growth Capital are co-leading the Series G round, which will be closed within a few days, sources familiar with the deal told TechCrunch. The round values Zepto, which delivers everything from grocery to electronics in minutes, at $4.6 billion pre-money, which comes to about $5 billion after the investment, according to a term sheet seen by TechCrunch. 

With this new round, Zepto has raised nearly $1 billion in fresh funding this year.

The startup has been on a tear lately, competing with Blinkit (owned by Zomato) and Swiggy’s Instamart in India’s burgeoning quick-commerce market, which is beginning to chip away market share from traditional e-commerce giants like Amazon.

Zepto is on track to generate more than $1.5 billion in annualized sales, a source familiar with the matter told TechCrunch. Blinkit is currently on track to see about $2 billion annualized sales this year, according to its parent company Zomato’s quarterly results statement.

Zepto declined to comment.

Retail is a $1.1 trillion market in India, but much of it is unorganized and served by small, family-owned businesses that run corner shops. Reliance Retail, which operates the nation’s largest retail chain, is valued at about $100 billion. “This is why any time a new model shows semblance of traction in India retail, investors greatly reward it,” an investor in the space told TechCrunch, requesting anonymity.

Quick commerce will account for 50% of online grocery sales by 2025, the research firm says.
Image Credits: Datum (data and image)

Indian news outlet Economic Times first reported Mars Growth’s involvement in Zepto’s new round. The Information earlier reported that General Catalyst was in talks with Zepto.

Quick-commerce services like Zepto are used widely in urban India, and they manage to fulfill orders quickly by using numerous discrete warehouses, known as “dark stores.” By strategically locating these facilities within a few miles of high-demand residential and commercial areas, they can fulfill orders within minutes.

The strong traction enjoyed by quick-commerce firms in India, a $4 trillion economy, has surprised investors and analysts across the world, because many similar business models have failed in other, more developed markets like the U.S. or Europe. Getir shut its quick-commerce operations in the U.S., the U.K. and Europe earlier this year.

This rapid expansion has also caught some established e-commerce players off guard, with analysts suggesting that companies like Amazon have been slow to adapt to changing consumer habits in India.

Quick-commerce companies are altogether on track to generate revenue of $4.5 billion to $5 billion in India this year, compared to Amazon India’s $18 billion, according to estimates by brokerage firm JM Financial. Amazon has been operating in India for about 10 years and has invested more than $7 billion in its e-commerce business in the country.

Market analysts feel Amazon hasn’t been strategic enough in India. “Founders — whether it’s Deepinder (Zomato), Aadit (Zepto), or Vidit (Meesho) or the team at Flipkart — have out-executed the management team [of Amazon],” Bernstein analyst Rahul Malhotra told TechCrunch earlier this month. Flipkart recently launched its quick-commerce offering in parts of Bangalore.

Zepto is planning to expand its network of dark stores to over 700 by March 2025. The startup, which also counts Nexus, Lightspeed, Avra and StepStone among its backers, said in June that its revenue had increased 140% compared with a year earlier. It said at the time that it works with more than 50,000 delivery partners and is adding more than 5,000 delivery partners each month.

In June, Zepto said that about 75% of its dark stores were EBITDA-positive as of May. Improved efficiency and scale mean that a dark store that previously took 23 months to achieve profitability now reaches that milestone in six months, the startup said at the time.

Zepto currently operates in large Indian cities and plans to expand to a few smaller cities in the coming months.

According to Goldman Sachs, the total addressable market in the grocery and non-grocery categories for quick-commerce companies in the top 40-50 Indian cities is about $150 billion.

Kiteworks captures $456M at a $1B+ valuation to help secure sensitive data

Low Angle View Of Kites Flying Against Clear Blue Sky

Image Credits: Bin Wang / EyeEm / Getty Images

Mark up another unicorn and large funding round for the cybersecurity industry: Kiteworks, which builds tools to secure email communications, file sharing and situations where people work with sensitive data, has raised $456 million from Insight Partners and Sixth Street Growth. The investment values the company at over $1 billion.

It’s a notable development for the San Mateo-based startup, which was formerly known as Accellion and suffered a major data breach in 2021. That incident, related to legacy services, impacted at least 300 organizations, including Morgan Stanley, the University of California, Kroger and Shell. 

Today, Kiteworks is going strong: It has been profitable for the past two years, and its tools serve 100 million end users and more than 3,650 global enterprises and government agencies.

This investment comes at a time when IT breaches continue to plague users and organizations. But the funding environment overall for startups remains challenging. 

That has resulted in well-performing cybersecurity companies shaping up as consolidators. Wiz earlier this year raised $1 billion to scoop up smaller players, and Kiteworks has similar plans.

Kiteworks said it will be using the money in part to make acquisitions. 

“We have a pretty aggressive M&A strategy that we started about a year-and-a-half ago to two years ago,” chief strategy officer Tim Freestone said in an interview. “This will help fund the continuation of that strategy into the next four years.”

Since 2022, Kiteworks has acquired four smaller enterprise startups. It will also be using funds for hiring, R&D and business development, he added.

The cybersecurity industry has been marked by a very rapid, prolific profusion of startups — partly because the threats that are being addressed constantly evolve, and so enterprising technologists want to pursue those opportunities. Arguably, Kiteworks represents the other side of the cybersecurity story.

The company has been around as a privately held operation for more than 20 years, so it’s not quite a “startup” in the classic sense. 

And while a lot of the attention in recent years has been around areas like cloud, network/infrastructure and application security, Kiteworks’ focus has been on data, specifically how to secure sensitive data, regardless of whether it is on-premises, in a cloud, or somewhere else entirely — like a line of information entered in a form on the web. 

“We’re finally at the data layer as an industry, and so that’s helped us,” said Freestone.

One of Kiteworks’ unique selling points has been its specific approach to handling sensitive data as part of what it calls a private content network, or PCN (not to be confused with the other PCN in infosecurity, which stands for process control network). Government organizations, or those that want to supply those organizations, need to adhere to a strong layer of data protection compliance.

Kiteworks claims it is the “only security platform authorized by FedRAMP” in the U.S. providing support for activities like file sharing, file transfer and email communications to meet those compliance requirements. Some of its solutions are creative: a DRM tool that makes a document appear like the “real” one to a recipient, but is in fact a facsimile — this ensures that most data never leaves the firewall of the sender.

“This investment reinforces Kiteworks’ role in tackling the challenge of managing sensitive data,” said Jonathan Yaron, CEO and chairman of Kiteworks (pictured below). “We’re eager to accelerate our growth and continue innovating to meet our customers’ evolving needs.”

Image Credits: Kiteworks

Insight Partners and Sixth Street Growth’s co-investment is coming as a mix of primary and secondary shares in the company. The company is not disclosing the proportions of primary to secondary, but PitchBook data from early July notes that the first tranche of the total sum, designated as growth capital, was $228 million.

Insight, which has put more than $4.5 billion into cybersecurity investments (including in Wiz), believes now is the moment for Kiteworks to double down. 

“With the rise in third-party cybersecurity threats and stringent regulatory requirements, Kiteworks has a large market opportunity in front of them for both organic and inorganic growth,” said Eoin Duane, managing director of Insight, in an email to TechCrunch. “Customers love the Kiteworks PCN—there’s strong growth within the existing customer base, and as data security continues to become more important, the company is well-positioned to attract new customers.”

Light beams depicting data being transferred through blockchain in and out ports; web3 framework

Story raises $80M at $2.25B valuation to build a blockchain for the business of content IP in the age of AI

Light beams depicting data being transferred through blockchain in and out ports; web3 framework

Image Credits: Flavio Coelho (opens in a new window) / Getty Images

AI giants like Anthropic, OpenAI and Stability AI have faced a lot of heat over how they’ve scraped data and rode rough-shod over others’ intellectual property when training and operating their foundational models. Now a startup called Story — which today is announcing $80 million in funding — is bidding to rebalance the scales with a blockchain-based platform to help IP owners track usage more effectively.

In the words of CEO and co-founder, S.Y. Lee, the aim is to build a more “sustainable” IP ecosystem fit for the next generation of digital consumers and builders. The startup says its approach is to think of IP like Lego and use blockchain to make that possible. “Anyone can fork and remix your IP permissionlessly while you capture the upside,” Lee said in an interview with TechCrunch. (A little ironic to label it “Lego,” given the many IP battles the toy brick company has faced over the years.)

The round is being led by Andreessen Horowitz, specifically its a16z crypto division, with crypto investor Polychain Capital also participating, alongside Scott Trowbridge (the SVP of Stability AI); K11 founder Adrian Cheng; and Cozomo de’ Medici, the digital art collector who took on an alias to evoke the famous Renaissance family. The new funding, a Series B, brings the total raised by Story and its parent, PIP Labs, to $143 million.

Being able to better capture the value of IP when it gets used has the potential to bring in a lot of money to license owners. In anticipation of its platform getting traction and working as envisioned, Story itself is realizing some significant value, too. We understand from sources close to the company that the startup is now valued at $2.25 billion post-money.

Story is building what it describes as an “IP blockchain” — a system and platform by which it envisions that creators will be able to assert their ownership on a piece of content, set usage parameters around that IP, and then let others license and use it.

How exactly that will work in practice still remains to be seen, though. The plan is to use the funding to continue building out the product — aiming for a commercial launch later this year, per Lee. Up to now, the startup has been adding users by way of a free, closed beta.

It says more than 200 teams — and “more than 20 million addressable IPs” — are registered on the platform so far, a result of partnerships with fashion design tool Ablo, Japanese comic platform Sekai and art collaboration startup Magma. 

Chris Dixon, who co-led the investment for a16z with Carra Wu, believes that new applications based on generative AI and other developments like it will be massively disrupting the economic models that traditionally underpinned how people made visual art or literature or music (or any other kind of “content” as it’s typically described these days when it’s digital). To keep the market for creativity thriving, a new way of monetizing content needs to be introduced, is the thesis.

“A new wave of AI-powered search engines give comprehensive answers instead of guiding users to websites. Social networks are increasingly populated by AI-generated images and videos,” Dixon writes in a blog post. “These AI systems were likely trained on original, human-created content but often don’t credit or cite their sources. If there’s no attribution or compensation, what incentive will there be to publish original creations on the open internet?” 

AI systems are just one area where content is being used and will be used in the future, but they are a significant one, which is why Story is not the only player in this space. Just last week, another startup, called Sahara AI, announced $43 million in funding to build out its own approach to addressing the question of how best to track and monetize IP in the age of AI. 

“Story distinguishes itself from Sahara by focusing on the IP and data layer of AI solutions rather than the existing AI infrastructure stack,” Lee told me in response to a question about how the two are different from each other. “While Sahara appears to target intellectual property concerns, these are mostly focused on data which is very different from the legal regime of IP. Story sees potential for partnership as the IP layer of solutions like Sahara and Ritual. We can become close partners.”

Lee himself has had a front-row seat to the story (so to speak) of content in the digital age. He started out as an enterprising journalist in the U.K. when he founded a platform called byline.com in 2014. He then built a crowdsourced, serialized fiction app called Radish (a competitor to the likes of Inkitt and Wattpad), which eventually he sold to Kakao for $440 million. 

Story — which Lee co-founded with Jason Zhao, the CPO — is, in a way, the natural progression of these previous experiences.

“If you look at everything from, you know, Netflix to Disney, they pour billions of dollars into content, but really it’s billions of dollars into marketing,” he said. “It’s kind of a zero sum war for attention to get more users and subscribers.”

His previous company, Radish, getting acquired for $440 million made him “rethink the dynamics of the market,” he said.

“I was drawing a lot of my venture capital money out for marketing,” he added, saying this is his attempt to build a different model to avoid that for creators of the future. 

Whether it will work, and whether creators want to use it, are questions that are yet to be answered. 

Those who believe they have a lock on how to invest for future scenarios are bullish, though. 

“What Bitcoin did for money and finance, Story is doing for content and IP,” said Olaf Carlson-Wee, the founder and CEO of Polychain Capital, in a statement. “Web3’s first phase was triggered by the 2008 financial crisis, leading to a revolution on money through networks like Bitcoin and Ethereum. Now advancements in AI are triggering a second phase in Web3, which will revolutionize IP.”

people walking past NSE sign

EXCLUSIVE: 360 One lifts its valuation of India's National Stock Exchange to $29.9B

people walking past NSE sign

Image Credits: Atul Loke / Bloomberg / Getty Images

360 One Asset, an investor in India’s National Stock Exchange (NSE), has increased its valuation for the stock exchange to $29.9 billion, significantly higher than the $18 billion to $19 billion price tag the firm was valued at in private transactions last year. 

The wealth manager, which invested in NSE through its SOF8 fund, disclosed its assessment of its stake in the NSE in an update to its investors in June that was reviewed by TechCrunch. The mark-up in valuation reflects the growing confidence in India’s economic prospects and a surge in public listings in the country.

NSE, which counts CPPIB, ChrysCapital, Temasek, Fairfax and Tiger Global among its backers, reported revenue of $1.94 billion in the financial year ended March — a 28% increase from revenue of $1.52 billion a year earlier.

The increase in NSE’s valuation comes as India grows ever more prominent in the global financial markets. The collective market cap of firms listed on the NSE late last year overtook the market cap of companies on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. NSE is also the world’s largest derivative exchange.

NSE didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. 360 One Asset declined to comment.

360 One’s update also included its assessment of its stake in a number of other startups. It ascribed a valuation of $11.5 billion to Swiggy, which last raised private capital in early 2022 at a valuation of $10.7 billion; $4 billion to merchant payments platform Pine Labs; $900 million to online seafood and meat store startup Licious; and $1.9 billion to edtech startup upGrad.

Kiteworks captures $456M at a $1B+ valuation to help secure sensitive data

Image Credits: Bin Wang / EyeEm / Getty Images

Mark up another unicorn and large funding round for the cybersecurity industry: Kiteworks, which builds tools to secure email communications, file sharing, and situations where people work with sensitive data, has raised $456 million from Insight Partners and Sixth Street Growth. The investment values the company at over $1 billion.

It’s a notable development for the San Mateo-based startup, which was formerly known as Accellion and suffered a major data breach in 2021. That incident, related to legacy services, impacted at least 300 organizations including Morgan Stanley, the University of California, Kroger and Shell. 

Today, Kiteworks is going strong: It has been profitable for the past two years, and its tools serve 100 million end users and more than 3,650 global enterprises and government agencies.

This investment comes at a time when IT breaches continue to plague users and organizations. But the funding environment overall for startups remains challenging. 

That has resulted in well-performing cybersecurity companies shaping up as consolidators. Wiz earlier this year raised $1 billion to scoop up smaller players, and Kiteworks has similar plans.

Kiteworks said it will be using the money in part to make acquisitions. 

“We have a pretty aggressive M&A strategy that we started about a year-and-a-half ago to two years ago,” chief strategy officer Tim Freestone said in an interview. “This will help fund the continuation of that strategy into the next four years.”

Since 2022, Kiteworks has acquired four smaller enterprise startups. It will also be using funds for hiring, R&D and business development, he added.

The cybersecurity industry has been marked by a very rapid, prolific profusion of startups — partly because the threats that are being addressed constantly evolve, and so enterprising technologists want to pursue those opportunities. Arguably, Kiteworks represents the other side of the cybersecurity story.

The company has been around as a privately-held operation for more than 20 years, so it’s not quite a “startup” in the classic sense. 

And while a lot of the attention in recent years has been around areas like cloud, network/infrastructure, and application security, Kiteworks’ focus has been on data, specifically how to secure sensitive data, regardless of whether it is on-premises, in a cloud, or somewhere else entirely — like a line of information entered in a form on the web. 

“We’re finally at the data layer as an industry, and so that’s helped us,” said Freestone.

One of Kiteworks’ unique selling points has been its specific approach to handling sensitive data as part of what it calls a private content network, or PCN (not to be confused with the other PCN in infosecurity, which stands for process control network). Government organizations, or those who want to supply those organizations, need to adhere to a strong layer of data protection compliance.

Kiteworks claims it is the “only security platform authorized by FedRAMP” in the U.S. providing support for activities like file sharing, file transfer, and email communications to meet those compliance requirements. Some of its solutions are creative: a DRM tool that makes a document appear like the “real” one to a recipient, but is in fact a facsimile — this ensures that most data never leaves the firewall of the sender.

“This investment reinforces Kiteworks’ role in tackling the challenge of managing sensitive data,” said Jonathan Yaron, CEO and chairman of Kiteworks (pictured below). “We’re eager to accelerate our growth and continue innovating to meet our customers’ evolving needs.”

Insight Partners and Sixth Street Growth’s co-investment is coming as a mix of primary and secondary shares in the company. The company is not disclosing the proportions of primary to secondary, but PitchBook data from early July notes that the first tranche of the total sum, designated as growth capital, was $228 million.

Insight, which has put more than $4.5 billion into cybersecurity investments (including in Wiz), believes now is the moment for Kiteworks to double down. 

“With the rise in third-party cybersecurity threats and stringent regulatory requirements, Kiteworks has a large market opportunity in front of them for both organic and inorganic growth,” said Eoin Duane, MD of Insight, in an email to TechCrunch. “Customers love the Kiteworks PCN—there’s strong growth within the existing customer base, and as data security continues to become more important, the company is well-positioned to attract new customers.”

Zepto founders

Zepto hits $5B valuation as quick commerce heats up in India

Zepto founders

Image Credits: Zepto

Zepto has finalized a $340 million round that increases its valuation to $5 billion, up from $3.6 billion in June and $1.4 billion last August, as the startup races to win market share in India’s contested quick commerce market. 

General Catalyst and Mars Growth Capital are co-leading the Series G round, according to people familiar with the matter. The round gives Zepto — which gives customers access to a range of categories, from grocery to electronics, that they can receive in minutes — a valuation of $4.6 billion pre-money, so about $5 billion following the funding, according to a term sheet seen by TechCrunch. 

Zepto competes with BlinkIt (owned by Zomato) and Swiggy’s Instamart in India’s fast-growing quick commerce market, which is beginning to chip away market share from traditional e-commerce giants.

Zepto is on track to do more than $1.5 billion in annualized sales, according a source familiar with the matter. BlinkIt is currently at about $2 billion annualized GMV. Quick commerce companies, which all started operations just three years ago, will do a combined annual sales of $4.5 billion to $5 billion in India this year, compared to Amazon India’s $18 billion. Amazon has been operating in India for about 10 years and has invested more than $7 billion in its e-commerce business in the country.

Retail is a $1.1 trillion market in India, but much of it remains untapped. Reliance Retail, which operates the nation’s largest retail chain, is valued at about $100 billion. “This is why any time a new model shows semblance of traction in India retail, investors greatly reward it,” an investor told TechCrunch.

Data and image: Datum. Quick commerce will account for 50% of online grocery sales by 2025, the research firm says.

Indian outlet Economic Times first reported about Mars Growth’s participation in Zepto’s new round. The Information earlier reported that General Catalyst was engaging with Zepto.

These quick commerce companies have established numerous discreet warehouses, known as “dark stores,” throughout urban India. By strategically locating these facilities within a few miles of high-demand residential and commercial areas, they can fulfill orders within minutes of purchase.

The growth of quick commerce firms in India, a $4 trillion economy, has surprised many investors and analysts, especially because many similar business models collapsed in other markets. This rapid expansion has also caught some established e-commerce players off guard, with analysts suggesting that companies like Amazon have been slow to adapt to changing consumer habits in India.

Amazon hasn’t been “strategic enough. And founders — whether it’s Deepinder (Zomato), Aadit (Zepto), or Vidit (Meesho) or the team at Flipkart — have out-executed the management team [of Amazon],” Bernstein analyst Rahul Malhotra told TechCrunch this month. Flipkart recently launched its quick commerce offering in parts of Bangalore.

Zepto aims to expand its network of dark stores to over 700 by March 2025. The startup, which also counts Nexus, Lightspeed, Avra and StepStone among its backers, said in June that its revenue had risen 140% from a year earlier. It works with more than 50,000 delivery partners and is adding over 5,000 delivery partners each month.

Zepto said earlier that about 75% of its dark stores were EBITDA positive as of last month. Improved efficiency and scale mean that a dark store that previously took 23 months to achieve profitability now reaches that milestone in six months, Zepto said in June.

Zepto currently operates in top Indian cities, and plans to expand to select smaller cities in the coming months.

According to Goldman Sachs, the total addressable market in the grocery and non-grocery categories for quick commerce companies in the top 40-50 cities is about $150 billion.