Startups Weekly: Wiz’s bet paid off in an M&A-rich week

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It’s rare to report on an 11-figure startup acquisition, let alone multiple high-value deals in a single week. And there are more subtle signs that things are looking surprisingly upbeat in startup land.

Most interesting startup stories from the week

Image Credits:Kimberly White/Getty Images / Flickr (opens in a new window) under a CC BY 2.0 (opens in a new window) license.

This week brought us some acquisitions, new startups, and sometimes heated rivalries.

Bet paid off: It took some serious nerve for Wiz to walk away from Google’s $23 billion offer last year, but it was worth it. Google now agreed to pay a record $32 billion in cash to buy the cloud security startup, plus another $1 billion in retention bonuses. 

This exit will be a large liquidity event for many, but particularly for Israel-based VC Cyberstarts, which will get a massive 200x return on its early investment into Wiz.

Amped up: SoftBank Group will acquire chip startup Ampere Computing in a $6.5 billion all-cash deal that is expected to close in the second half of 2025.

Reinsured: Insurtech startup Next Insurance is getting acquired by Germany’s Munich Re for $2.6 billion.

Synthetic dreams: Nvidia reportedly acquired synthetic data startup Gretel for a nine-figure price tag exceeding its latest $320 million valuation.

Bits and bolts: The former CEO role of one-click checkout startup Bolt is launching a new e-commerce startup. Spangle AI, as it’s called, creates custom landing pages for shoppers based on what they searched for or clicked on.

Generalist robots: A key senior research scientist at DeepMind left Google to create Generalist AI, a stealth robotics startup that is already backed by Nvidia, with the ambition “to make general-purpose robots a reality.” 

Replaced: Shortly after its IPO filing, Swedish scale-up Klarna announced it would now be Walmart’s exclusive BNPL partner instead of competitor Affirm.

Freightnemies: Logistics unicorn Flexport is suing two former employees who formed competing startup Freightmate AI, alleging that they stole documents and code, which the pair strongly denies.

HR drama: HR tech company Rippling is suing competitor Deel in a lawsuit largely centered on an employee who Rippling claims was working as a spy for Deel. Deel denied the allegations.

Most interesting VC and funding news this week

Evroc CEO and founder Mattias Åström
Evroc CEO and founder Mattias Åström.Image Credits:Evroc

Here are some funding news items that, perhaps somewhat unexpectedly, hinted at confidence this week.

European cloud: Evroc, a Swedish startup aiming to build “secure, sovereign, and sustainable hyperscale cloud” from Europe, raised $55 million in Series A funding.

No dilution: Spanish HR unicorn Factorial secured $120 million from General Catalyst. This is neither equity nor venture debt, but rather a nondilutive loan.

Assistive programming: Graphite, an AI-powered code-review platform, secured a $52 million Series B round led by Accel, with participation from Anthropic’s Anthology Fund and others.

AI-hungry: Food e-commerce startup GrubMarket raised a $50 million Series G equity round at a post-money valuation of over $3.5 billion and said it will fund the implementation of more technology, including AI.

Upbeat: Fintech-focused VC firm Ribbit Capital is raising $500 million for a new fund in yet another positive signal for the sector.

Climate investments: Just Climate, an offshoot of Al Gore’s Generation Investment Management, raised $175 million from Microsoft’s Climate Innovation Fund and CalSTRS.

Last but not least

Y Combinator Partner Michael Seibel
Image Credits:Kimberly White / Getty Images

Shortly after Y Combinator’s W25 Demo Day and a couple weeks before its spring batch, the accelerator announced the departure of once-CEO Michael Seibel, who had already transitioned into a less operational group partner role and will now simply be a “partner emeritus.”



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