Geography
Israel VC Funds
Venture capital funds investing in Israeli startups. Browse Israel-focused VCs in the Start-Up Nation ecosystem.
TDJ Pitango Ventures is a Polish-Israeli, technology-focused venture capital fund founded in 2017 and based in Warsaw, Poland. It is a joint venture between TDJ, a Polish family-owned industrial group active in equity, venture, real estate, finance and philanthropy whose portfolio includes Warsaw-listed companies FAMUR, Zamet and PGO, and Pitango, Israel's largest venture capital fund, with around $2 billion under management, operating since 1993 with more than 200 investments and over 80 exits. The fund was also created with support from Poland's National Center for Research and Development. Investing on a 'smart money' formula, TDJ Pitango concentrates on early and growth phases, deploying $1M to $5M per round into startups with strong technology operating in large or fast-growing markets, and targets sectors including big data and analytics, artificial intelligence, machine learning, medical devices and digital health, software, mobile technology, media and IoT. It is founder-friendly, takes minority stakes and prefers to co-invest with other value-add investors, supporting portfolio companies with network access, senior talent, fundraising help and exit support. The fund is led by Managing Partners Wojciech Fedorowicz and Daniel Star. Across roughly 10 portfolio companies, including Tylko (custom furniture, into which it invested nearly 15M PLN), Cosmose AI (approaching Polish-unicorn status at a roughly $500M valuation), Neptune, StethoMe, CallPage, GG Predict, Syntoil, Vocaly and SmartDust, it has made about five seed investments and two Series A investments. Its most recent tracked investment was in Visby Medical in June 2025. The fund bridges Polish industrial heritage and Israeli venture expertise.
Techstars is a global platform for investment and innovation that has supported over 4,000 startups since its inception in 2006. Based in Boulder, Colorado, Techstars operates accelerator programs worldwide, providing early-stage startups with access to capital, mentorship, and a vast network of investors and partners. Their portfolio spans a diverse range of industries, including HealthTech, FinTech, Web3, CleanTech, and more. Notable companies in their portfolio include Chainalysis, DataRobot, and Remitly. Techstars has facilitated over $27.3 billion in total funding for its startups, with a cumulative market cap of $113.6 billion. Techstars' investment strategy involves pre-seed and early-stage investments through their accelerator programs. They invest up to $120,000 in each startup during the accelerator program, and follow-on investments through their Venture Fund. This strategy allows them to support companies from their initial stages through to growth.
Tekfen Ventures is an early-stage venture capital firm based in New York City, established in 2016 as the corporate venture arm of Tekfen Holding, a publicly traded Turkish industrial conglomerate founded in 1956 with more than 18,000 employees across 40 subsidiaries operating in construction, agriculture, manufacturing and real estate. Investing out of a roughly $65M fund with a financial-return focus, Tekfen Ventures backs visionary founders pursuing bold transformations in the legacy industries that build, feed and supply the world. It invests across the technology spectrum, software, hardware and life sciences, typically writing first checks of about $1M to $4M at the Series A and B stages, generally as a co-investor, and skews toward deeptech and research-based companies tied to the digitization and decarbonization of agriculture, construction, manufacturing and real estate, as well as advanced materials, energy efficiency, renewable energy, IoT, robotics and cybersecurity. Beyond capital, the firm leverages Tekfen Holding's industrial leadership, global reach and operating expertise to act as a strategic partner, and it has reviewed deals as far afield as the Philippines, Australia, India and China. Its portfolio of roughly 28 investments includes two unicorns, industrial cybersecurity company Claroty, valued at about $2.5 billion in 2024, and agricultural biotech Pivot Bio, alongside Tropic Biosciences and enterprise analytics platform Soft Machine. Its most recent tracked investment was in Tropic in August 2025. Longtime leaders Managing Director Kris Kemeny and founder-president Sinan Uzan departed the firm in January 2026. By pairing capital with a major industrial parent, Tekfen Ventures backs deeptech transforming legacy industries.
Tekton Ventures is an international, seed-stage venture capital firm founded in 2008 and headquartered in San Francisco, with deep Silicon Valley roots and a global footprint. It runs a collaborative global investment platform, backing both early-stage startups and early-stage funds worldwide, and emphasizes long-term relationships with founders and fund managers that let it capture emerging innovation trends at inception. Its permanent-capital structure is designed to embrace the long, illiquid nature of venture investing. Typical first checks run roughly $100K to $1M, with a sweet spot around $500K, and the firm often invests alongside other early-stage investors rather than always leading. Sector interests span consumer and marketplace businesses, fintech, e-commerce, enterprise applications, retail, mobility and the gig and sharing economy. Geographically it concentrates on Silicon Valley plus select tech centers such as London and Israel, and fast-growing digitally connected markets across Asia, including China, Korea and India, as well as Latin America and Africa. The firm reports more than 160 portfolio companies, 66-plus fund partners, companies operating in 25-plus countries, over $106B in portfolio market value and 32 IPOs and exits. Notable companies include Coupang (NYSE IPO, roughly $102B market cap), Toss, Flutterwave, PayJoy, Merama, Signifyd, Moove, Outdoorsy, Thumbtack and PropTiger (acquired by Aurum PropTech in July 2025). Recent activity includes a Series A investment in LatAm conversational-AI startup Vambe in December 2025 and the NASDAQ listing of Virtuix in January 2026. The firm was founded by Jai Choi, who serves as Co-Founder and Managing Partner, and runs an approximately six-person team. Tekton blends fund and direct investing across global frontier markets.
TEL Venture Capital, Inc. is the corporate venture capital arm of Tokyo Electron Ltd. (TEL), the world's leading semiconductor and flat-panel-display production-equipment manufacturer. Founded in 2006 and headquartered in Silicon Valley (Fremont, California) with an additional office in Tokyo, the firm invests globally in innovative technologies that generate synergies with Tokyo Electron's core semiconductor and display businesses, their peripheral fields, and other silicon fabrication and process technologies. Target areas span process, design, materials, hardware and software, sustainability and conservation, and adjacent deep-tech, and the firm has issued an open call for startups of any stage building ultra-small, real-time sensors, for pressure, temperature, gas, flow, moisture and plasma characteristics, for integration into state-of-the-art semiconductor process equipment. Rather than acting as a purely financial backer, TEL VC treats portfolio companies as strategic partners, pursuing joint development and collaborative business and offering access to Tokyo Electron's global business infrastructure, deep technical resources, and worldwide sales and distribution channels, typically as a co-investor. Per its own site the firm has invested in 52 companies across 12 countries and regions. Notable and recent portfolio companies include Ferroelectric Memory Company (Series C, November 2025), Fortaegis Technologies (July 2025), EN2CORE Technology (June 2025), Hinalea, ADTEX, NexFi Technology, Cellid and Wooptix. Bobby Shirai joined as president in December 2024, and the team has expanded with multiple investment and technical professionals across the US, Japan, Korea and Israel. By coupling capital with joint development and Tokyo Electron's global platform, TEL VC backs the deep-tech and materials companies most relevant to advanced semiconductor manufacturing.
Telefónica Tech Ventures is the global corporate venture capital vehicle of Telefónica, the Spanish multinational telecommunications group, specialized in cybersecurity and adjacent enterprise technology. Launched in 2020 and promoted by ElevenPaths, Telefónica's cybersecurity unit within Telefónica Tech, together with Telefónica Innovation Ventures, the group's broader CVC active since 2007, it is headquartered in Madrid with a presence in Silicon Valley. The fund's stated purpose is to detect disruptive innovation in cybersecurity, including threat intelligence, cloud security, data protection and AI applied to security, while also backing cloud, IoT and data startups worldwide and developing joint business with them. It typically invests up to roughly EUR 6M, about $7M, per deal at Series A to C stages, with observed checks in the $2M to $3M range, generally as a co-investor, and at launch set out to fund around fifteen cybersecurity developers over three years. Its investment scope spans Europe, the United States, Israel and Latin America. Tracked activity shows about 53 investments and 15 portfolio exits, with the most recent investment being a seed round in Mexican clean-energy marketplace Solfium in January 2025, around $2.2M alongside Wayra Hispam. Notable cybersecurity and connectivity holdings include Nozomi Networks in OT/IoT security, Red Sift, CounterCraft, Devo, Hdiv Security, Blueliv/4IQ, Kymatio, Mitiga Solutions and Monogoto. The fund is led by director Guenia Gawendo and leverages Telefónica's global telecom infrastructure, customer base and operating expertise as a strategic partner to its portfolio companies.
Telefónica Ventures, formally Telefónica Innovation Ventures (TIV), is the corporate venture capital arm of Telefónica, the Spanish multinational telecommunications group. Founded in 2007 and headquartered in Madrid with an office in Silicon Valley, it invests and builds strategic partnerships aligned with Telefónica's global strategy. It runs a dual model: making direct investments in technology startups and acting as a limited partner in a network of leading venture capital funds in key Telefónica markets, 12 funds in total, including Alter Venture Partners in Silicon Valley, Vintage in Israel, four funds in Spain and three in Brazil. Its current portfolio comprises around 10 directly held startups plus more than 80 companies reached through those fund commitments. Investment scope spans Europe, the United States, Israel and Latin America, and thematic focus areas include 5G and next-generation communications, artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, IoT, cloud, edge, video, gaming, fintech and digital transformation, with growing interest in Web3 for telecoms. Across tracked direct activity it has made roughly 28 investments with about 4 exits and only a handful of lead positions, typically co-investing in larger rounds. Notable and recent direct investments include AI search company Perplexity in December 2024, Barcelona-based Mitiga Solutions in 2024, embedded-insurance startup Weecover, and cybersecurity firm Nozomi Networks. Telefónica Ventures sits within a broader corporate innovation ecosystem that also includes the Wayra accelerator, Telefónica Venture Builder and the cybersecurity-focused Telefónica Tech Ventures. By combining direct investments with a fund-of-funds network across its key markets, Telefónica Ventures connects the group to global technology innovation.
TELUS Ventures is the strategic investment and corporate venture capital arm of TELUS Corporation, one of Canada's largest telecommunications companies. Founded in 2001, it is among Canada's most active and longest-standing CVC funds, investing across stages from Seed to pre-IPO but concentrating on Series A and Series B rounds, and it is willing to lead. Operating from Vancouver, British Columbia, with a team of roughly 13 people including six partners led by Managing Partner and VP Terry Doyle, the firm has also expanded internationally, opening an Israel presence with Partner and Investment Director Ravit Warsha Dor. The fund manages approximately CAD $625M and typically deploys $10M to $15M into post-Series A startups, leveraging TELUS' network, distribution and customer base to accelerate portfolio growth. Investment themes span digital health and healthtech, agriculture technology, connected consumer experiences, IoT and smart cities, AI, security, enterprise platforms and food tech, with a notable impact orientation. As of early 2026 the firm had backed about 57 companies, adding three in the prior twelve months, and recorded one unicorn, one IPO and 21 acquisitions, with notable exits and holdings including Mogo, Taulia, Veracode, League, MedStack, PocketPills, Clinia and Radicle. Most investments are in Canada, about 22, followed by the United States, about 15. Recent 2025 activity included co-leading a $35M round in workplace mental-health platform Unmind and participating in autonomous-trucking AI company Waabi's $750M Series C.
10vc is a venture capital firm based on the West Coast, co-founded by Ben Patterson and Daniel Ramirez in 2022. The firm focuses on investing in pre-seed and seed-stage companies that are building breakthrough technologies. Their investment strategy emphasizes early-stage startups in areas such as synthetic biology, AI/ML, energy transition, and advanced manufacturing. They aim to back founders with transformative ideas that can scale into impactful platforms. Notable companies in 10vc's portfolio include Remitly, Luminar, Aurora Solar, Maxwell, and Anduril, showcasing their ability to identify high-potential startups across diverse industries. Their typical investment ranges around $1 million, and they actively work alongside founders to help accelerate growth and de-risk their companies. 10vc’s model leverages a global network of partners, including research labs, accelerators, and industry leaders in sectors like fintech, healthcare, and cybersecurity. With a collaborative approach, they provide startups with not just capital but also strategic guidance and access to critical expertise in growth, marketing, and technology. Based in Millbrae, California, 10vc has quickly built a reputation for supporting innovative founders and helping them scale from the earliest stages to IPOs.
Terra Venture Partners is a leading Israeli multi-stage venture fund that invests in and incubates novel impact technology companies. Founded in 2007 by Dr. Astorre Modena and Dr. Harold Wiener and based in Jerusalem, it was one of the first Israeli funds to focus on cleantech and dedicates most of its resources to climate and impact. The fund backs early-stage Israeli startups developing products with the potential to make a positive impact on the environment and society, investing from pre-seed and seed through to early and growth stages. Its remit spans renewable energy, resource and water efficiency, sustainability, agritech, foodtech, mobility, smart cities, healthcare and aging, Industry 4.0, and construction and proptech. Terra typically invests between $300K and $2M depending on stage and often acts as the lead and first institutional investor, supporting founders through its Terralab incubator in Yokneam in addition to capital. The firm has made roughly 65 investments across a portfolio of 30-plus companies, managing tens of millions of dollars across its funds. Notable portfolio companies include Wi-Charge in wireless power, Phoebus Energy, SmarTap and Layla Electric, while its latest exit was cybersecurity firm Cybersixgill, acquired by BitSight for $115M in November 2024. The team of about six includes four partners, led by Managing Partner Dr. Astorre Modena, who holds a PhD in physics, and Founding Partner Dr. Harold Wiener, who holds a PhD in applied chemistry. Its most recent disclosed investment was a seed round in Layla Electric in February 2025. Terra pairs incubation with lead-investor conviction in climate and impact.
The Fund VC, established in 2018, is a unique venture capital firm that operates a community-driven investment model. It focuses on early-stage startups across a variety of sectors including technology, consumer goods, and healthcare. The Fund VC operates through a network of micro-funds spread across different cities such as New York, Los Angeles, London, and Sydney, each managed by a group of local investors with deep expertise in their respective markets. The Fund VC has made notable investments in companies like Tia, a women’s health tech company; Parsley Health, a holistic health startup; and Bravely, a platform providing on-demand professional coaching. This portfolio reflects their commitment to backing innovative solutions that address significant market needs. The firm leverages its extensive network of founders, operators, and investors to provide not just capital but also mentorship and strategic support to its portfolio companies. This approach helps startups navigate early challenges and scale effectively. The Fund VC is particularly known for fostering a strong community among its portfolio companies, encouraging collaboration and shared growth
The Helm is a New York City-based early-stage venture capital firm with a mission to invest in female-founded companies and redefine the venture landscape by focusing on gender-lens investing. Founded by Lindsey Taylor Wood, The Helm has become a prominent player in supporting women-led startups across various industries including healthcare, sustainability, and technology. Notable portfolio companies include Tia, a modern healthcare provider for women; Venus Aerospace, pushing the boundaries of hypersonic transportation; and Rebellyous Foods, revolutionizing plant-based meat production. The Helm’s investment strategy emphasizes identifying undervalued companies that demonstrate significant promise early on, ensuring they have the capital to achieve their potential. Their average check size varies, but they are known for leading funding rounds and maintaining active engagement with their portfolio companies. Startups seeking investment should highlight innovative solutions and robust business models that align with The Helm’s focus on female empowerment and sustainability. The team at The Helm includes Lindsey Taylor Wood, who leads the fund’s strategy and fundraising efforts; Julie Weber, COO and General Partner, with extensive experience in fund administration and operations; and Olivia Fleming, Partner, who directs the fund’s sustainability initiatives and angel investor network. This experienced team supports a diverse portfolio of over 20 companies and maintains a strong community of investors and founders committed to advancing female entrepreneurship.
Third Point Ventures is the Menlo Park-based venture capital arm of Third Point LLC, the New York investment adviser founded in 1995 by Daniel S. Loeb, with roughly $5 billion in assets under management. Established in 2000 and led since inception by Managing Partner Robert Schwartz, a private-equity veteran with more than 25 years of experience, the firm invests across the full corporate lifecycle, from early-stage to growth capital, with a thematic approach that maps technology transitions to value-creation opportunities, and it is willing to lead. Its focus spans enterprise applications and infrastructure, cybersecurity, data and AI analytics, IT infrastructure, fintech, mobile, crypto, industrial and healthcare technology. Third Point Ventures has invested in roughly 79 companies over nearly two decades, averaging about four new investments per year over the past ten years. Notable portfolio companies and exits include SentinelOne, Upstart, Sysdig, Forter, Apigee, Packet, Enphase Energy, DataGrail, Yellowbrick Data, Ahana, NextSilicon (a Series C of $220M at a $1.6B valuation), Verbit, Grip Security, Zenity, Unframe AI and Trullion. The firm has a team of around 10, including roughly eight partners; partner Dan Moskowitz focuses on devops, infrastructure software, gaming and media, and cybersecurity. In addition to its Silicon Valley headquarters, Third Point Ventures opened a Tel Aviv office as a second hub, having made multiple Israeli investments since 2015 including SentinelOne and Verbit. Backed by a major hedge-fund parent, Third Point Ventures invests with thematic conviction across the technology lifecycle.
Third Prime is an early-stage venture capital firm focusing on financial and industrial technology sectors. Established in 2016 by Keith Hamlin and Wes Barton, the firm leverages their extensive backgrounds in M&A law, private equity, and hedge funds to identify and invest in paradigm-shifting startups. Notable investments include companies such as Moonware, which automates aviation ground operations, and Paywatch, which offers financial wellness services in Asia. The firm prioritizes close partnerships with entrepreneurs, offering both capital and strategic guidance. With a keen eye for early insights and a commitment to optimizing outcomes for both founders and investors, Third Prime has built a diverse portfolio. This includes companies like Halborn, providing blockchain security, and Inspiren, using AI to enhance patient safety in healthcare. Third Prime's team is composed of seasoned professionals with backgrounds in law, investment banking, and technology. Key members include Mike Kim, with over a decade of investment experience, and Jenny Bloom, a former corporate associate at Wilson Sonsini. This experienced team supports Third Prime's mission to drive success through independent thinking, focus, and rigor.
Tiger Global Management, founded in 2001 by Chase Coleman III, is a leading investment firm that focuses on internet, software, consumer, and financial technology companies. The firm has made significant investments in some of the most notable high-growth companies globally. Among its prominent investments are Alibaba, Facebook, LinkedIn, and Spotify. More recent investments include companies like OpenAI, Roblox, Square, and SentinelOne. Tiger Global's investment strategy is characterized by its aggressive approach to deal-making, often moving quickly to close deals and providing substantial funding to its portfolio companies. This strategy has helped the firm build a diverse portfolio, which includes a significant number of unicorns and high-profile public companies. The firm has also been involved in substantial funding rounds for tech startups, such as OpenAI's $11.3 billion funding round, which has significantly impacted the AI industry. Their ability to identify and support innovative companies early has been a hallmark of their success.
Trailhead Capital is a mission-driven venture capital firm based in Boulder, Colorado, focused on creating financial, societal, and ecological returns by investing in regenerative food and agriculture. Founded by Bobby Pelz and Tripp Wall, Trailhead Capital backs early-stage companies that are driving innovations across the food value chain, from farm to supply chain to consumer. The firm targets Seed and Series A investments in tech-enabled solutions that promote regenerative practices, aiming to transform food systems and foster sustainability. With its inaugural $50 million Regeneration Fund I, Trailhead Capital has supported 22 companies to date, with two successful exits. The firm’s portfolio includes groundbreaking companies such as EarthSense, which develops autonomous robots for agricultural research, and Ascribe Bioscience, a biotech startup focusing on natural crop protection. The firm is a Certified B Corp, underscoring its commitment to positive environmental and social impact. Trailhead Capital’s approach emphasizes the intersection of technology and regenerative agriculture, leveraging advancements to improve soil health, reduce carbon emissions, minimize food waste, and enhance the quality of food.
Twin Ventures is an AI-focused angel and pre-seed fund founded in 2018 and based in San Francisco, California, that builds and fosters AI-first startups. The firm was created by brothers Swapnil and Snehal Shinde, who previously co-founded the AI travel assistant Mezi, where Swapnil was CEO and Snehal was Chief Product Officer and CTO, before its acquisition by American Express. Drawing on that operating background, Twin backs entrepreneurs building disruptive ventures that solve real-world problems and aim to define new markets and become category leaders through Applied AI, offering hands-on technical, product and operational expertise in areas such as natural language processing, neural networks, human-assisted AI, machine learning, personalization, AI analytics, chatbots and messaging. As an early-stage investor it typically writes cheques of around $100,000 with follow-on capacity of up to roughly $150,000, and it frequently partners and co-invests alongside larger venture firms in seed and Series A rounds. The firm has invested in approximately 19 companies across the United States, India and Israel, spanning enterprise applications, high tech, retail and other sectors. Its most notable investments include Flam, an AI-native mixed-reality and interactive-content platform whose $4.57 million seed round Twin co-led with Inventus Capital Partners, and Oddr, a legal-tech platform that raised a $2 million seed round led by Saama Capital and Twin Ventures in October 2022. By combining founder-operator experience with early AI conviction, Twin Ventures backs Applied-AI founders and co-invests alongside larger firms as their rounds come together.
U.S. Venture Partners (USVP) is one of Silicon Valley's longest-established venture capital firms, founded in 1981 by Bill Bowes, Stuart Moldaw and Robert Sackman and headquartered in Menlo Park, California. An early entrant to the venture industry, USVP has invested more than $4.3 billion since inception across more than 500 companies, of which 93 have completed initial public offerings and over 100 more have been profitably acquired. The firm specialises in early-stage investing, with a strategy of being the lead Series A or B investor in companies based in the United States or Israel, concentrating on four core sectors: cybersecurity, enterprise software, consumer including e-commerce, and healthcare and IT-enabled healthcare services. Its team, including Dafina Toncheva, Jacques Benkoski, Rick Lewis, Steve Krausz, Casey Tansey and Jonathan Root, brings together former investors, entrepreneurs, CEOs, technologists and domain experts with well over 100 years of combined experience. In December 2022 USVP closed its thirteenth fund, USVP XIII, at $400 million, and from 2020 to the present its funds have distributed $1.1 billion to investors. Its extensive portfolio and track record include Box, Yammer, Pluto TV, HotelTonight, Trunk Club, Happy Returns, Check Point Software, Imperva, Trusteer, ThreatMetrix, Cato Networks, Arkose Labs, Guidewire, Human Interest, HeartFlow, Inari Medical, Inspire Medical Systems, Omada Health, Carrot Fertility and Zerto, with its most recent disclosed deal being Tiny Fish in August 2025. With four decades of leading early-stage rounds in the US and Israel, USVP remains a defining Silicon Valley venture firm.
Union Tech Ventures is the technology investment arm of the Union Group, a family-owned Israeli holding company, and was founded in 2016 with headquarters in Tel Aviv. The firm is on a mission to discover what comes next in the digital disruption of traditional industries, partnering with entrepreneurs who have long-term vision and the ambition to build category-leading companies. It typically backs Israeli and Israeli-related founders, concentrating on mobility and retail technology while ranging more broadly across enterprise software, hardware, defense-tech and digital health. Union Tech Ventures invests primarily at the growth stages, most actively Series B and C, though it engages from Series A through to pre-IPO, and aims to grow alongside its portfolio companies over the long term, generally as a co-investor; its rounds have averaged roughly $12.5 million at Series A, $34 million at Series B, $130 million at Series C and $62.5 million at Series D. A key differentiator is the operational expertise, network and market insight it draws from the Union Group's businesses, which include Toyota and Geely in automotive, H&M and Daiso in retail, a partnership in Super-Pharm and Dyson, and real estate and infrastructure operations. The firm has participated in around 47 investment rounds across roughly 13 companies, including one unicorn, with notable holdings such as Tactile Mobility, Dynamic Yield, Quantum Machines, Triple Whale, Guardio, Candivore, XTEND and Eleos Health, its most recent disclosed deal being Eleos Health's Series C in January 2025. By drawing on the Union Group's industrial businesses, Union Tech Ventures backs Israeli founders disrupting traditional industries.
United Ventures is an independent Italian venture capital firm founded in 2013 by Massimiliano Magrini, former country manager of Google Italy, and Paolo Gesess, and headquartered in Milan. The firm invests in digital technologies, software, enterprise software, fintech, cloud, the Internet of Things, cybersecurity, marketplaces, B2B and B2C platforms and deep tech, backing visionary entrepreneurs who tackle critical, often underestimated problems and aim to digitise sectors that improve quality of life and promote sustainable development, and it is willing to lead. United Ventures invests primarily at the early stage across Western Europe, North America and Israel, with around 70% of its current portfolio companies being Italian. The firm manages two early-stage funds and a growth vehicle, UV T-Growth; the 2023 close of United Ventures III, a EUR 150 million early-stage fund that targets 15 to 18 European technology companies with initial tickets of EUR 1 million to EUR 8 million, brought total funds under management toward EUR 500 million. With a team of around 15 professionals, including investment partners Giulia Giovannini and Sara Lovato and operating partner Jacopo Drudi, United Ventures has built a track record of roughly 35 investments, several IPOs and notable exits, including 10x-plus returns on FACEIT and Musixmatch in 2022. Portfolio companies include wealthtech Moneyfarm, online grocery marketplace Everli, crypto exchange Young Platform, used-car platform Cazoo and fraud-prevention firm Cleafy, with its most recent disclosed deal being Cleafy's Series B in March 2026. As one of Italy's leading independent VCs, United Ventures backs digital-technology founders across Europe, North America and Israel.
Vast Ventures is a venture capital firm that focuses on investing in disruptive companies with a global impact. Founded in 2004 by Doug Chertok, the firm is headquartered in New York, New York. Vast Ventures has a diverse portfolio, investing in sectors such as healthcare, finance, AI, cloud software, and sustainability. They have a strong track record with notable investments in companies like Sweetgreen, Conductor, and Clover Health. The firm's investment strategy centers on fostering innovation and supporting entrepreneurs who aim to create significant positive change. They emphasize long-term partnerships, providing not just capital but also strategic guidance and support to help their portfolio companies grow and succeed. Vast Ventures is managed by a team of experienced professionals, including Doug Chertok, Aniq Rahman, and Talia Zapolanski. The team leverages their extensive backgrounds in finance, entrepreneurship, and venture capital to help startups navigate the challenges of early-stage growth. For startups seeking investment, Vast Ventures is particularly interested in companies that aim to improve health and happiness, promote resource sustainability, increase human potential and productivity, and foster knowledge and empathy. They prefer to lead investment rounds and take active roles in the development of their portfolio companies.
VentureIsrael is an Israeli early-stage deep tech venture capital fund that backs founders building breakthrough technology from seed to scale across quantum, space, neuro, semiconductors, AI infrastructure, cybersecurity and digital health. Its thesis centers on timing, investing where readiness, urgency and adoption are beginning to align, a defensible deep tech moat, and companies that can either dominate a market or force a fast acquisition; the fund describes itself as market-agnostic but conviction-driven on technology, time-to-market and people, and it is willing to lead. The firm is led by Managing Partners Rafael (Roman) Gold and Gadi Isaev, who have built the Israeli tech ecosystem together for more than 12 years across five joint ventures, supported by venture partners including Gil Don (Wib, acquired by F5), Ran Bar-Yosef (Spectralics) and Arkady Karpman (Rapyd co-founder and CTO), plus scientific advisors such as Prof. Shlomi Dolev and Prof. Simon Litsyn, co-inventor of the USB flash drive. Collectively the partners have made more than 50 investments in Israeli startups with over 10 exits and helped channel over $500M of VC funding into the country; their first fund ranks top-quartile by IRR and top-decile by DPI for its vintage. In May 2025 VentureIsrael launched its second fund, around $25M, to back roughly 20 Series A companies. Portfolio names include SSI (Safe Superintelligence), ClearML, Adversa AI, HEQA Security, NovaLink Space and Remondo, with prior exits including AppSee (ServiceNow), Revelator (Warner Music Group) and Splitit (ASX IPO). By pairing deep ecosystem experience with a timing-and-moat thesis, VentureIsrael backs Israeli deep-tech founders.
Verissimo Ventures is a pre-seed and seed stage venture fund investing in technology startups across Israel, the US, and Europe. The firm focuses on backing founders who aim to solve significant problems using cutting-edge technology. Verissimo Ventures is particularly interested in vertical software, operational software, and engineering & infrastructure software, along with innovative business models targeting emerging and large markets. Founded by Alex Oppenheimer, Verissimo brings a hands-on approach from day one, helping portfolio companies turn finance and operations into strategic assets. The team’s background spans operational finance, technology leadership, and R&D, with experience in guiding companies from founding stages through to IPO and M&A exits. This extensive experience allows them to provide invaluable support to their portfolio companies at every growth stage. The fund's portfolio includes companies such as Causal, Rossum, and Trullion, among others. Founders have praised Verissimo for their deep operational expertise, network, and strategic support, which have been critical in helping startups navigate early-stage challenges and achieve significant milestones.
Veritas Venture Partners is one of Israel's most experienced venture capital firms, founded in 1990 and based in Ra'anana. The firm manages around $100M across three funds, including VVP Fund II LP, and invests primarily in technology-based companies at the seed and very early stages, with selective participation through Series A and Series B; typical investment sizes range from about $1M to $3M, and it is willing to lead. Its focus areas have historically been internet and enterprise software, network and communications technology, and healthcare, with a portfolio spanning Israel and the United States. Over its history Veritas has made roughly 50 investments and recorded nine exits via acquisition. Notable portfolio companies and outcomes include Gilat Satellite Networks, acquired by Comtech Telecommunications in January 2020, Trivnet, a provider of mobile financial-services solutions for mobile network operators and banks, acquired by Gemalto in 2010, the storage technology company 3Ware, and Fring, a mobile communications service enabling free group video, voice calls and chat, in which Veritas led a $12M Series B round alongside North Bridge Venture Partners. The firm's partners have included co-founder Gideon Tolkowsky, founding partner Yadin Kaufmann, and partners Gill Zaphrir, Rann Marom and Laurie Olivier. As a long-established firm, Veritas has limited recent new-deal activity. With more than three decades of investing across Israeli and US technology, Veritas Venture Partners has backed internet, enterprise software, communications and healthcare founders from the seed and earliest stages.
Vertex Venture Holdings (Vertex Holdings) is a Singapore-based venture capital investment holding company and a wholly-owned subsidiary of Temasek Holdings. Founded in 1988, it is one of Singapore's largest and oldest VC platforms. Originally the corporate venture arm of engineering conglomerate Singapore Technologies, it was acquired by Temasek in 2004 after an earlier fund network unwound following the dot-com bust. Rather than operating as a single fund, Vertex Holdings acts as an anchor investor and operational backbone for a proprietary global network of separately and independently managed VC funds. There are seven network partnerships: Vertex Ventures China, Vertex Ventures Israel, Vertex Ventures SEA & India, Vertex Ventures US, Vertex Ventures Japan, Vertex Ventures HC for healthcare and Vertex Growth. The family of funds invests in early-stage technology opportunities through the Vertex Ventures funds, early-stage healthcare through Vertex Ventures HC, and growth-stage opportunities globally through Vertex Growth. Across these funds, Vertex manages roughly USD 6.8 billion in assets and counts more than 300 active portfolio companies. Notable successes include Grab, PatSnap, Nium, Instarem, FirstCry, XPressBees, Licious, 17LIVE and CyberArk. In 2024 its activity leaned heavily toward India, which accounted for roughly two-thirds of investments amid a surge of capital-efficient startups. The platform is led by Group President and CEO Chua Kee Lock, and it emphasizes value creation beyond capital, helping portfolio companies with cross-border expansion and new-market entry. As Temasek's anchor venture platform, Vertex Venture Holdings underpins a global network of funds backing technology and healthcare founders.
VIVUS Inc., now operating as VIVUS LLC, is a biopharmaceutical company committed to developing and commercializing innovative therapies for serious medical conditions. Founded in 1991 and headquartered in Campbell, California, VIVUS has a focused strategy on addressing unmet medical needs through a diverse portfolio of products and pipeline developments. VIVUS's product portfolio includes Qsymia®, a weight management medication approved in the U.S. and South Korea, which has shown efficacy in reducing blood pressure and managing weight in adolescents and adults. They have also developed PANCREAZE®, a pancreatic enzyme replacement therapy used to treat exocrine pancreatic insufficiency (EPI) caused by conditions like cystic fibrosis. The company's investment strategy involves acquiring and managing revenue-generating products. They focus on expanding their commercial footprint globally, as seen with their strategic partnerships and product launches in markets like South Korea. Key team members include John Amos, CEO, and Santosh Varghese, MD, President and Chief Medical Officer, who bring extensive experience in the pharmaceutical industry to drive VIVUS's mission forward.
Vibe Capital is a venture fund founded by Ankur Nagpal, known for its focus on early-stage investments in technology-driven startups. The fund's strategy is centered on identifying and supporting innovative companies, particularly those in emerging markets like India, Brazil, and across Africa, reflecting a belief in the transformative power of venture capital in these rapidly growing regions. Vibe Capital has raised two funds so far: the first at $12 million and the second at $70 million, with a significant portion of investments directed outside the U.S. The fund targets sectors like AI, Web3, and deep tech, emphasizing a proactive approach to wellness, financial innovation, and entrepreneurship-enabling platforms. What sets Vibe Capital apart is its no-management-fee structure, ensuring that all raised capital is directed into startups, with a third of the fund's capital coming from the founders themselves. The fund is particularly attractive to entrepreneurs due to the hands-on experience of its team, who are all former founders and operators, providing invaluable support in growth, marketing, and go-to-market strategies. The fund’s network is another strong point, with ties to prominent investors and firms like Bessemer and General Catalyst, offering startups crucial connections for future fundraising.
Vine Ventures, founded in 2019 by Ryan Zurrer, is a venture capital firm headquartered in Zurich, Switzerland, with a strong focus on early-stage investments in the life sciences and technology sectors. The firm has a particular interest in innovative solutions for mental health and wellness, emphasizing the development of psychedelic therapies and healthcare technology systems. Notable investments from Vine Ventures include companies like Alto Neuroscience, which recently went public, and Kocomo, a proptech startup based in Mexico City. Vine Ventures has also backed Remepy, Lykos Therapeutics, and Necto, demonstrating their commitment to advancing healthcare and financial software solutions. Geographically, Vine Ventures invests in the U.S., Latin America, and Israel, reflecting their global reach and diversified portfolio. Their strategic approach involves leading funding rounds and providing substantial support to help startups scale and achieve significant milestones. The Vine Ventures team boasts experienced professionals like Daniel Tarockoff and Ozan Polat, based in San Francisco and Zurich respectively. Ryan Zurrer, the founder, has a robust background in venture investing and entrepreneurship, particularly in the renewable energy and blockchain sectors. This diverse expertise allows the firm to offer valuable insights and hands-on support to their portfolio companies. For startups aiming to collaborate with Vine Ventures, it's essential to present innovative, scalable solutions that align with their focus areas. Direct, concise pitches that demonstrate clear market potential and strategic fit are highly valued by the firm. By fostering a collaborative environment and leveraging their extensive network, Vine Ventures continues to drive impactful advancements in the health and wellness sectors.
Viola Ventures is the early-stage venture capital fund of Viola Group, Israel's largest tech-focused investment platform, Herzliya-headquartered with more than $5 billion of total assets under management across the broader Viola family, which also includes Viola Growth, Viola Credit and Viola Partners. Viola Ventures itself was founded in 2000 by Shlomo Dovrat and Avi Zeevi, manages roughly $1.5 billion of dedicated early-stage capital, and recently closed a new $250M raise, announced December 2025, to back what it calls 'Israel's next tech wave,' and it is willing to lead. The active partner team, Shlomo Dovrat, Avi Zeevi, Omry Ben David, Itzik Avidor and Zvika Orron, supported by Senior Advisors Ronen Nir and Daniel Cohen, explicitly targets approximately 20 new investments concentrated on Vertical AI, Enterprise AI, AI Infrastructure, Fintech, Cybersecurity, Quantum, Defense Tech and selectively consumer products. Since 2000 Viola Ventures has led or participated in more than 150 investments and produced category-defining outcomes for the Israeli ecosystem, including ironSource, acquired by Unity, Payoneer, a NASDAQ listing through merger, Pagaya, a NASDAQ public listing, Redis Labs, Lightricks, ProteanTecs, Immunai, PayZen, Faye, Duetti and PhaseV. The fund's hands-on partnership model, pairing capital with senior operating advice, Israeli ecosystem access, and follow-on capacity from Viola Growth, has been a hallmark of its 25-year track record. As the early-stage arm of Israel's largest tech investment platform, Viola Ventures backs the country's next generation of AI, fintech and cybersecurity founders.
Wadi Ventures is a European-backed Israeli micro-seed venture capital fund founded in August 2012 by General Partner Jonathan Pacifici and co-founder Reuven Ulmansky to back early-stage disruptive Internet and new-media startups based in Tel Aviv's 'Silicon Wadi' tech ecosystem. The fund operates a single vehicle, the Wadi Micro Seed Fund, and combines capital deployment with hands-on, accelerator-style support. Initial checks are intentionally small at $50,000 to $150,000 per company and pair with a three-pronged program of financial investment, founder mentorship, and structured European market exposure, with the goal of bringing portfolio companies to a strong Series A launch with credible business connections in Europe, generally as a co-investor. Founding partner Jonathan Pacifici is a multilingual Italian-Israeli venture capitalist and entrepreneur fluent in Italian, English, Hebrew and French; Reuven Ulmansky is a veteran of the elite Israel Defense Forces Unit 8200 technology intelligence corps with senior management experience. The fund's backer pool comprises major European, notably Italian, financial institutions and well-known industry-figure entrepreneurs, with explicit emphasis on corporate strategic partners across telcos, banks and adjacent industries that help shape early-stage ideas. Across approximately 14 to 16 disclosed investments, named names include website-localization platform Bablic, acquired by Unbabel on June 1, 2023 in the fund's flagship exit, Clctin, Croosing, Wadi's most recent disclosed investment in August 2015, Folloyu, PicBadges and Winkapp. New investment activity has been quiet since 2015. By pairing small first checks with mentorship and European market access, Wadi Ventures backed Tel Aviv internet and new-media founders.
WndrCo, founded in 2016 by Sujay Jaswa and Jeffrey Katzenberg, is a multi-stage technology investment firm and holding company based in Beverly Hills, California. The firm focuses on the Future of Work, Consumer Technology, and Cybersecurity, investing in high-growth companies that revolutionize how people live and work. WndrCo's notable investments include Airtable, a platform that enables teams to build custom workflows; 1Password, a widely used password manager; Aura, which offers digital security and identity theft protection; and Twingate, a zero trust networking service. They have also invested in companies like Bitmovin, which provides video streaming solutions, and Oura, known for its health-tracking smart ring. WndrCo is not only an investor but also actively builds new companies and partners with existing ones to accelerate their growth through new product development, expanding distribution channels, and recruiting top-tier management teams. The firm has raised over $460 million for its latest Seed and Venture funds, aiming to support transformative growth companies.
World Trade Ventures (WTV) is an early-stage venture capital firm founded in 2016 and headquartered in New York City, with operational links to Tel Aviv and Stamford. The firm is embedded with SilverTech Ventures, a Silverstein-backed startup incubator originally located at the World Trade Center campus, which gives WTV deep deal-flow ties to Israeli tech founders moving into the US market. WTV invests primarily at the Series A stage in US-based startups and targets companies bridging the physical and digital worlds across enterprise software, fintech, AI and ML, cybersecurity, marketing technology and digital health, generally as a co-investor. The portfolio includes more than 21 companies, with one unicorn, Semperis in Active Directory identity protection, which crossed the $1B valuation threshold in 2024. Other named portfolio companies include Aquant, SQream, Lili, Fundrise, Reveal Security, Alma Security, Zest, AvoMD, Visit.org, Vi, SwiftConnect, Sepio, Covercy, City Hive, Igentify, WoodSpoon and HYPR Brands. Exits to date include Semperis as a unicorn, Julius via acquisition, and HYPR Brands in May 2020. The firm operates with a small team of roughly four people including three partners. Fund size is not publicly disclosed; check sizes are consistent with a typical seed-to-Series A boutique fund participating alongside larger lead investors. By leveraging its incubator ties to Israeli founders entering the US and focusing on companies bridging physical and digital worlds, World Trade Ventures backs early-stage enterprise software, fintech, cybersecurity and digital-health companies.
Xenia Venture Capital is an Israeli high-tech and life sciences investment company founded in 2003 and publicly traded on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange. Headquartered in Tel Aviv, Xenia invests in early-stage Israeli companies across high-tech and medical technology, with an increasing focus on life sciences. A core element of its platform is a 50% stake in VLX, a technological incubator operating under the Israel Innovation Authority's incubator program that supports data-driven biotech, pharma and digital-pharma startups. Beyond capital, Xenia provides portfolio companies with mentoring, business and strategic counseling, fundraising assistance, exit planning, and shared back-office infrastructure, finance, accounting, logistics and office support, services well suited to first-time scientific founders coming out of academia or the Israeli Innovation Authority incubator pipeline, and it generally invests as a co-investor. Since inception the firm has invested in more than 40 companies and notched one IPO and at least six acquisitions; flagship outcomes include the June 2020 NASDAQ IPO of PolyPid at roughly a $273M market cap, the acquisition of orthopedic device company OrthoSpace by Stryker, and the 2021 exit of MEC software vendor Saguna. Recent activity remains steady, with its most recent reported investment on April 8, 2025 in Arcuro Medical in surgical devices. The firm's leadership has included CEO Lars Thoren and previously Eli Sorzon, and the team comprises roughly eight people including seven partners. By pairing capital with incubation and back-office support, Xenia Venture Capital backs early-stage Israeli high-tech and life-sciences founders.
Yara Ventures is an independent multi-strategy venture capital firm founded in 2016 and headquartered in Dublin, Ireland. The firm operates as a 'smart money' investor and manages several distinct vehicles rather than a single fund: Yara Seed, an evergreen open-end fund focused on the seed stage with active investments concentrated in Spain, the United States and Israel; a food-tech and innovation fund covering early stage through Series A and B; and a fintech, insurtech, proptech and regtech fund also targeting early stage through Series A and B, generally as a co-investor. The firm's broader investment thesis covers artificial intelligence, blockchain and digital assets, media, financial technology and insurance technology, all areas where Dublin's status as a European hub for regulated financial services and tech R&D gives Yara natural deal flow. Disclosed portfolio companies include Verdocs, a US-based e-signature and document-workflow platform and Yara's most recent investment in April 2024, InnovoPro, an Israeli chickpea-protein food-tech company, and Architechtures, a Madrid-based AI-powered residential building-design platform. Yara Ventures should not be confused with Yara Growth Ventures, the Oslo-based corporate venture arm of Norwegian crop-nutrition giant Yara International; the two are unrelated organizations. Specific fund size figures and full team rosters are not publicly disclosed. By running multiple thematic vehicles across seed, food-tech and fintech and leveraging Dublin's position as a regulated-finance and tech hub, Yara Ventures backs early-stage founders in AI, blockchain, food-tech and financial technology.
YOBE Ventures is a Hollywood, Florida-based family office and venture capital firm that has been backing extraordinary tech founders from Seed to Series A since 2015; the formal LLC, Yobe Consulting LLC, is registered in Florida and the Ventures brand was formalized around 2020. The firm is led by founder Yotis Tonnelier and pairs a direct investment activity with a separate advisory practice that helps high-potential founders raise capital with clarity, speed and conviction. YOBE invests across the United States, Europe, Israel and Latin America, is sector-agnostic within tech, and concentrates on SaaS, AI, fintech and deep-tech companies that have crossed the post-product-market-fit threshold, typically at least $1M in ARR and ready to scale globally, generally as a co-investor. Check sizes range from $50K to $500K with the ability to syndicate larger allocations alongside its international advisor network. The firm reports approximately 14 portfolio companies, with named historical co-investments including Aptiv, Aircall, Canva and Payfit, more than $84M raised alongside its advisor network, five positive exits via IPO or other liquidity events, and a self-reported 14.6x actual MOIC across live valuations and exits since inception. YOBE was named HackerNoon's Startup of the Year 2024 in Venture Capital and has stated a 2025 focus on creative early-liquidity strategies for portfolio companies. By pairing direct investment with a capital-raising advisory practice and an international syndicate network, YOBE Ventures backs post-product-market-fit SaaS, AI and fintech founders scaling globally.
Zaitoun Ventures is a values-driven Israeli investment firm and startup factory founded in 2014 in Tel Aviv by Israeli-Arab Harvard MBA Forsan Hussein and Israeli-Jewish serial entrepreneur Ami Dror. The firm's distinctive thesis is that companies co-built and co-led by Jewish and Arab founders, Zaitoun is Arabic and Hebrew for olive, are commercially advantageous as well as socially constructive, opening market access across the Middle East, North Africa and the Arabic-speaking diaspora and producing more resilient teams. Zaitoun acts as a business-development company connecting Israeli and Arab entrepreneurs, providing capital, strategic guidance, operational support and an international partner network to back disruptive startups across surgical and medical devices, enterprise SaaS, edtech, neurotech, consumer apps and deep-tech hardware, generally as a co-investor. Reported deployment was approximately $19M in its first year of operations with a stated target of around $100M of deployment in 2016. Disclosed portfolio companies include Pi-Cardia in structural heart-valve repair, its most recent reported investment in April 2020, Sodyo in mobile-interaction software, LeapLearner in kids-coding edtech, which Ami Dror also founded, Comedy Break, a Tel Aviv-Ramallah AI comedy personalization company, Myndlift in attention-disorder neurotech, Ninispeech in speech therapy, Sidis Labs in motion-sickness wearables and Teramount in optical connectivity. Recent public activity has been limited since 2020, and current fund size and team roster are not publicly disclosed. By backing companies co-led by Jewish and Arab founders, Zaitoun Ventures pairs capital with a thesis that diverse teams unlock regional market access and resilience.
Zero Carbon Capital (ZCC) is a venture capital firm based in Hampshire, UK, specializing in pre-seed and seed-stage investments in companies that develop hard-science solutions to address the global challenge of decarbonization. Founded in 2019 by Pippa and Alex Gawley, ZCC is dedicated to supporting startups across Europe that have the potential to significantly reduce carbon emissions through innovative technologies. ZCC's investment strategy is deeply rooted in scientific rigor and environmental stewardship, focusing on startups that can make substantial impacts in areas with significant emission challenges. Their portfolio includes companies like Level Nine, which pioneers chemical manufacturing from biological feedstocks, Ionate, which develops smart transformers for renewable energy grids, and RepAir, which innovates low-power electrochemical direct air capture technologies. The firm recently closed a £20 million fund, backed by a diverse group of investors, including Isomer Capital and Green Future Investments. This fund is aimed at accelerating early-stage climate tech ventures that can contribute meaningfully to global carbon reduction. ZCC's team is composed of highly experienced professionals with strong scientific and technological backgrounds, such as Pippa Gawley, who brings years of climate tech investing experience from both the US and Europe, and Sarah Jones, PhD, who has a background in Bioprocess Engineering and Environmental Biotechnology. ZCC is not only an investor but also a strategic partner, providing its portfolio companies with the resources and guidance needed to scale their innovations effectively and make a lasting impact on the planet.
Zigg Capital is a venture capital firm based in New York City that specializes in proptech, aiming to revolutionize the real estate, construction, and retail sectors through technology. Their notable investments include Spruce Holdings, Crusoe Energy Systems, and Vontive, reflecting their focus on innovative solutions within these industries. Zigg Capital operates globally, investing from seed to Series B stages, with a typical check size ranging from $1M to $10M. They have a strategic approach, emphasizing demographic shifts, evolving preferences, and addressing societal inequalities to improve the quality of physical environments. This is evident in their recent $225 million second fund aimed at supporting visionary entrepreneurs in proptech. The team at Zigg Capital is led by Founding Partner Dave Eisenberg, who brings extensive experience from previous roles at companies like Floored and Red Swan Ventures. The firm values deep research, imagination, collaboration, and respect for the entrepreneurial journey, actively seeking to partner with startups that share their vision for transformative innovation. Startups can approach Zigg Capital via their website, where they encourage pitches that align with their mission to enhance the built environment through technology
ZORA Ventures is a Tel Aviv-based impact venture capital firm founded in 2017 by Vanessa Bartram. Since inception it has been a leader in Israel's impact space as an early-stage deep tech investor, backing leading scientists and entrepreneurs with globally scalable technology to combat climate change and cultivate sustainable food systems. The firm positions itself as a hands-on investor and operator working intimately with its teams to convert lab-scale innovations into mainstream food, agriculture and climate solutions for the world's largest corporations. Its first vehicle, the ZORA Israel Impact Fund, is an oversubscribed US$10M fund invested in Israel's leading foodtech, agtech and climate-tech startups; each portfolio company targets significant, quantifiable progress toward a UN Sustainable Development Goal, climate change, environment, health access or food security, while aiming to deliver top-quartile venture returns. ZORA invests primarily at seed and Series A in Israel-based startups, with a portfolio of roughly 12 companies spanning Israel, the US and the UK, generally as a co-investor. Notable investments include WeedOUT in bio-based agtech, Wasteless in food-waste software, Solutum in plastic-alternative packaging, Amai Proteins in designer proteins and healthy sweeteners, and Forsea Foods in cultivated seafood, with at least one exit, CodeMonkey. The firm has partnered with Rho Impact to advance climate innovation and impact measurement. Founder and Managing Partner Vanessa Bartram is an impact entrepreneur turned investor, previously founder of the Miami-based HR company WorkSquare; she holds an MBA from Harvard and a BA from Princeton. ZORA backs Israeli foodtech, agtech and climate founders.