Why These Ukrainian Entrepreneurs Are Making LA Their Home

Aisha Counts
Aisha Counts is a business reporter covering the technology industry. She has written extensively about tech giants, emerging technologies, startups and venture capital. Before becoming a journalist she spent several years as a management consultant at Ernst & Young.
Why These Ukrainian Entrepreneurs Are Making LA Their Home
Joey Mota

Fleeing war and chasing new opportunities, more than a dozen Ukrainian entrepreneurs have landed in Los Angeles, finding an unexpected community in the city of dreams. These entrepreneurs have started companies that are collectively worth more than $300 million, in industries ranging from electric vehicle charging stations to audience monetization platforms to social networks.

Dot.LA spent an evening with this group of Ukrainian citizens, learning what it was like to build startups in Ukraine, to cope with the unimaginable fear of fleeing war, and to garner the resilience to rebuild.


Andrew Skrypnyk, CEO of learning platform Promova, decided to enter tech after being awed by 3D graphics on a computer. He went on to spend time in a variety of software development roles, learning more than 20 programming languages in the process. Artem Kudymovskyy, co-founder and CCO of software development firm ITRex Group, similarly became inspired when he saw his first personal computer and met a former programmer who taught him to code.

Others took more winding paths. Vlad Klimchuk studied biomedical engineering and then became one of Ukraineโ€™s highest-grossing filmmaker before switching into tech and co-founding image-based social network TLPRT. Dana Sydorenko spent time as a military paramedic and created Ukraineโ€™s best army supply company before co-founding GameTree with John Uke.

Despite taking different paths, what these founders share is a passion and ingenuity for solving their own problems and developing creative solutions.

For instance, when Oleksiy Malytskyy first moved to Los Angeles, had a difficult time finding an apartment which led him to co-found co-living startup Sota. When Alexey Menshikov, a former sound designer, became frustrated that the gaming company he worked for wouldnโ€™t accept his ideas, he decided to start Beatshapers, his own company in immersive gaming.

Alexey Menshikov -Beatshapers, Oleksandr Gamaniuk -tarta.aiJoey Mota

The sense of resilience and adaptability these entrepreneurs share is exactly what investors look for in startup founders.

โ€œStartup life is really hard. And it's a grind to go from a zero to a one and to have something that's just a concept, or an idea and bootstrap that and build it and get to a place where you're actually making money,โ€ said Brandon Gerson, a former entrepreneur turned venture partner at Expert Dojo and angel investor in Primeclass.

Starting a tech company isnโ€™t easy being with, but in Ukraine itโ€™s especially hard. Ukraineโ€™s challenging history includes the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the Russian invasion of Crimea in 2014, numerous financial crises, and of course the recent Russian invasion of Ukraine amongst other events.

Each of these events caused the economy to sink, businesses to collapse and access to capital to dry up. Over the years Ukraineโ€™s annual GDP has swung wildly as result, from highs of 10%+ annual GDP growth to lows of -20% growth. Ukrainian founders not only face the normal challenges of managing a startup, but have the added pressures of navigating rapidly shifting economic conditions.

The limited number of venture capital firms in the country also means access to capital is hard to come by, and thus harder to scale.

This wasnโ€™t always the case: Ukraine was broadly known for having a thriving tech scene before the war. Between 2015 and 2016 for instance, investors pumped more than $200 million into startups and Ukraineโ€™s IT outsourcing sector was worth billions.

Pavlo Shlapak - Phygit, Alexey Menshikov -Beatshapers, Vlad Klimchuk-TLPRT Pavlo Shlapak - Phygit, Alexey Menshikov -Beatshapers, Vlad Klimchuk TLPRT Joey Mota

But as Sydorenko, the paramedic turned GameTree co-founder, put it, โ€œat some point Ukraine has limits.โ€ Not only is it difficult to raise money in Ukraine, but โ€œyou will never be able to build a publicly traded company over there because this market does not exist,โ€ she said.

Although Sydorenko and her team were able to build a social network in Ukraine that now has over 500,000 users, fundraising was difficult. It wasnโ€™t until moving to Los Angeles that they were able to raise a significant amount of money: $650,000 in their most recent round.

By virtue of being from Ukraine then, these entrepreneurs naturally have resilience and adaptability in spades. โ€œSomeone who comes from Ukraine and having gone through what those folks have gone through, I don't even mean just in the war, just in history, they're prepared in a way that most of the folks are not,โ€ said Brian MacMahon, whose accelerator Expert Dojo has invested in more than 200 startups across Africa, Latin America, and India among other regions.

Now the Russia-Ukraine war has threatened to dismantle the countryโ€™s tech industry as infrastructure is destroyed, internet access and electricity are cut off, and tech companies and their workers flee.

Even still, Ukrainian tech workers are carrying on in astounding fashion.

One Ukranian man, who was locked in his dimly lit basement for weeks, carried on programming and coding even while bombs were going off overhead, said Kudymovskyy, as an illustration of Ukrainian resolve.

By some estimates nearly 90 to 95% of all startups fail, but in the experience of Pavlo Shlapak, founder of Phygit, which creates digital experiences for physical products, the survival rate for Ukrainian startups is significantly higher. โ€œAnd that's because we can adapt, we have a positive mind, great sense of humor, and it's a super valuable source actually in crisis situations,โ€ he said.

For Ukrainian founders then, relocating and building a startup in sunny Los Angeles, is almost easy by comparison. Access to capital is plentiful, networking opportunities abound and the Los Angeles tech community is thriving.

Despite being separated by more than six thousand miles across the Atlantic Ocean, several Ukrainians saw parallels between Odessa, Ukraine and Los Angeles for example.

โ€œOdessa is the most diverse city in Ukraine,โ€ said Primeclass founder Ivan Kovpak, who noted the connection between his hometown and Los Angeles. Kovpak, Skrypnyk and Kudymovskyy agreed that both cities possess comparable climates, proximity to water and similar levels of openness and diversity.

Ivan Kovpak, Primeclass founderJoey Mota

โ€œIn California, everybody kind of likes Silicon Valley, but there's something very special about this place,โ€ said Kudymovskyy, a former consultant who moved to Los Angeles in 2012 before starting his own firm ITRex Group. Kudymovskyy also said that diversity and access to different ideas can actually make startups more successful.

The culture of creativity and storytelling was one of the main appeals of relocating to Los Angeles, according to several founders. More than one joked that Ukrainians are not the best salesmen or marketing gurus. But living in the filmmaking and content creation capital of the world, they now had the perfect combination of storytelling and tech.

The combination of a U.S. founder with sales experience and โ€œa founder from Ukraine who will develop a product is the killer combination,โ€ said Malytskyy, co-founder of Sota.

Other founders agreed. โ€œI think the combination of Ukraine and LA is our key of success,โ€ said Sydorenko. โ€œIf you take almost any company, you have developers in Ukraine, you test your product in Ukraine, and you have people who create networking and promote your product in LA, any sort of company will be successful,โ€ she said.

Although it may seem more obvious to build a startup in Silicon Valley rather than Los Angeles, several founders thought otherwise.

โ€œIt makes perfect sense that if you want to build a startup, you think that San Francisco is the spot,โ€ Sydorenko added. โ€œBut actually it's the worst place to build because the cost per developer is extremely high [and] you need to compete with the biggest companies in the market,โ€ she said.

Omar Zhandarbekuly, Yevgen Arutyunyan - AEV charging, Oleksyy Malytskyy - Go SotaJoey Mota

Plus as more Silicon Valley investors open offices in the city and startups relocate their headquarters, Los Angeles is quickly becoming a new tech capital in its own right, said Menshikov.

In many ways Los Angeles was the perfect landing spot for this group of entrepreneurs. But as the Russia-Ukraine war rages on, many of the founders canโ€™t help but feel the tug of home.

They each grappled with the dual responsibility and tension of building successful startups in the U.S., while still supporting their country and taking care of friends, family and employees back home.

Founders often find themselves helping colleagues find shelter and safe places to work back in Ukraine or working to relocate family members. At times this can mean ceasing startup operations to assist with the war.

โ€œEvery Ukrainian is in one way or the other contributing to the war,โ€ whether they are on the front lines or not, said Malytskyy, who organized a resistance group inside of Russia at the start of the war.

For the founders, this often means using money as a form of resistance.

โ€œWe also fight on the economical front,โ€ said Skrypnyk. In his mind they are financial soldiers, helping to wage war by beefing up the Ukrainian economy, sending monetary support to the military and propping up families and businesses.

Although these founders have physically left Ukraine, they brought with them their countryโ€™s sense of resilience, humor, purpose and passion. For now, Los Angeles is home, but the spirit of Ukraine lives on.

Disney Picks AI, Paramount Picks a Fight

๐Ÿ”ฆ Spotlight

Happy Friday, Los Angeles.

If last week felt like Netflix bought the script for Hollywoodโ€™s future, this week Disney and Paramount walked in with rewrites. One is handing its most valuable characters to an AI model. The other is trying to yank Warner Bros. away from Netflix with an all cash offer. Underneath both headlines is the same fight over who really owns the audience.

Disney, OpenAI and the AI powered vault

The Walt Disney Company struck a multiyear agreement with OpenAI that turns Sora into a kind of licensed imagination engine for more than 200 characters across Disney, Marvel, Pixar and Star Wars. Fans will be able to generate short, Sora made videos and images featuring Mickey, Moana, Darth Vader and others, with Disney curating select clips onto Disney Plus, while ChatGPT also rolls out inside the company.

For a studio that has spent years guarding its IP with lawyers, this is a big tone shift. Disney is telling the next generation of fans that playing with the characters happens through an AI model, not just a camera or sketchbook. That could create new formats and jobs, but it also blurs the line between human made and machine made work and puts fresh pressure on ongoing union conversations about training data, credits and compensation.

Paramount crashes the Netflix and Warner Bros. story arc

On the deal side, Warner Bros. Discovery is suddenly the lead in a love triangle. After Netflix announced plans to buy WBDโ€™s studios and streaming business for a mix of cash and stock, Paramount Skydance came in with a hostile, all cash tender offer at 30 dollars per share for the entire company, including linear networks like CNN, TNT Sports and Discovery.

So WBD investors are looking at two very different futures. A Netflix deal would bolt Warnerโ€™s IP and production engine onto the worldโ€™s largest streaming platform and strip away cable. A Paramount deal would fuse two legacy Hollywood houses and keep more of the old bundle intact. For creators and crews in LA, both paths point to the same reality: fewer, bigger buyers with more control over what gets made, how it is distributed and who gets paid.

Taken together, Disneyโ€™s OpenAI partnership and the escalating fight over Warner Bros. are not just AI news or M&A news. They are signals that the next version of Hollywood will be built by a tight circle of platforms that own the IP, the channels and now the models that sit between creators and audiences.

Now keep scrolling for this weekโ€™s LA venture deals, fund announcements and acquisitions.

๐Ÿค Venture Deals

      LA Companies

      • K2 Space, a Torrance-based startup building large, high-power satellite platforms, raised a $250M Series C at a $3B valuation in a round led by Redpoint with participation from T. Rowe Priceโ€“advised accounts, Hedosophia, Altimeter, Lightspeed and Alpine Space Ventures. The company says the funding will accelerate deployment of its next generation โ€œheavy-lift eraโ€ spacecraft, built to deliver far more power and capability than typical smallsats and to support missions across LEO, MEO and GEO for commercial and U.S. government customers, where it already has over $500M in signed contracts. - learn more
      • Stic raised a $10M bridge round led by Accretion Capital, bringing the Los Angeles based out of home adtech startupโ€™s valuation to $200M. The company, which turns everyday drivers into mobile ad inventory for brands, plans to use the funding to expand across more than 30 U.S. states and Canada, deepen relationships with national advertisers and agencies, and strengthen its operations in new markets. - learn more
      • Machina Labs secured a strategic investment and initial partnership agreement from Abu Dhabiโ€™s Strategic Development Fund, the investment arm of EDGE Group, as part of a plan to deploy its AI driven robotic manufacturing technology in the UAE. The deal includes an initial capital infusion with potential funding of up to AED 125 million as the parties explore a joint venture to produce advanced metal structures for sectors like aerospace, defense, and mobility. Machina Labsโ€™ software defined RoboCraftsman platform will anchor the collaboration, enabling rapid, flexible production of complex metal components closer to regional demand. - learn more
      • AnySignal raised a $24M Series A led by Upfront Ventures, with participation from Also Capital, BlueYard Capital, Balerion Space Ventures, First In Ventures and other strategic backers. The Los Angeles based company plans to use the funding to scale production of its space communications and RF systems, expand its national security product lines, and build a new LA area facility that brings everything from algorithm design to high rate manufacturing under one roof. - learn more
      • Saviynt raised a $700M Series B growth round at an approximately $3B valuation, in a financing led by KKR with participation from Sixth Street Growth, Ten Eleven, and existing backer Carrick Capital Partners. The Los Angeles based identity security company says it will use the capital to accelerate product development and integrations as enterprises lean on its AI powered platform to govern human, machine, and AI agent identities across applications, data, and infrastructure. - learn more
      • Haven Energy raised $40M in new funding to accelerate its push into distributed residential power, combining an equity round led by Giant Ventures with a debt facility from Turtle Hill and additional backing from investors including the California Infrastructure Bank, Carnrite Ventures, Chaac Ventures, Comcast Ventures, and Lerer Hippeau. The Los Angeles based company plans to use the capital to deepen partnerships with utilities and community choice aggregators, expand its solar plus battery leasing model and Channel Partner Program for local installers, and scale one of the nationโ€™s largest residential virtual power plant networks, building on more than 10 MW installed and over 50 MW in development for 2026. - learn more
      • Diald AI raised $3.75M in funding to expand its AI powered real estate due diligence and underwriting platform for investors and lenders. The company says it will use the capital to deepen its data coverage, enhance underwriting automation, and grow its customer base of institutional and private real estate investors looking to analyze deals faster and with more consistency across markets. - learn more
      • Hot Smart Rich, Maggie Sellers Reumโ€™s fast growing โ€œfemale ambitionโ€ media brand, has secured a seven figure strategic investment from Steven Bartlettโ€™s media and investment company FlightStory. The partnership aims to turn HSR into a transatlantic platform that connects culture, content, capital, and community, with ambitions to 10x revenue and headcount across production, marketing, product, ecommerce, and membership. In under a year, Hot Smart Rich has already built a cult following with around 1.8M downloads and roughly 500,000 audience members by blending money and business talk with an intimate, group chat tone. - learn more

        LA Venture Funds

        • Mucker Capital backed Orion Sleepโ€™s $18M seed round, joining investors including Browder Capital and Second Sight to support the launch of the companyโ€™s AI powered Smart Cover. The startupโ€™s mattress cover fits over any standard bed, uses built in sensors to track heart rate, breathing and sleep stages, and automatically heats or cools each side of the bed to optimize deep and REM sleep. Orion says the funding will help scale production and commercialization of its system, which starts at $2,295 and is designed as a more accessible alternative to fully replacing a mattress. - learn more
        • B Capital led Fervo Energyโ€™s oversubscribed $462M Series E, backing the Houston based companyโ€™s push to make next generation geothermal a core source of always on, carbon free power. Fervo says the round will accelerate buildout of its flagship Cape Station project in Utah, expected to reach 500 MW by 2028, and support early development of additional plants as rising AI and electrification demand strain the grid. - learn more
        • Trousdale Ventures joined Vatn Systemsโ€™ $60M Series A, a round led by BVVC that the Rhode Island based defense tech company says is one of the largest financings in the autonomous underwater vehicle space. Vatn plans to use the capital to expand its team, accelerate R&D, and scale manufacturing of its Skelmir AUV platforms and INStinct navigation system as it deepens work with the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps and grows its international customer base. - learn more
        • Morpheus Ventures participated in Nu Quantumโ€™s $60M Series A, an oversubscribed round led by National Grid Partners with Gresham House Ventures also joining to back the companyโ€™s distributed quantum networking platform. Nu Quantum says it will use the capital to accelerate its โ€œEntanglement Fabricโ€ roadmap, scale its team, and expand globally as it connects multiple quantum processors into a modular, fault tolerant โ€œquantum datacenterโ€ architecture. - learn more
        • Morpheus Ventures joined Frescoโ€™s โ‚ฌ15M Series C round, backing the companyโ€™s push to power AI driven cooking experiences across a growing network of connected kitchen appliances. The round, which also included new and existing investors like Middleby, ACT Venture Capital, AE Ventures and Alsop Louie Partners, will help Fresco scale its AI Cooking Companion and KitchenOS platform globally, integrate more OEM partners, and deliver personalized, cross brand cooking guidance to home cooks. - learn more
        • Rainfall Ventures participated in Zedโ€™s $16.5M Series A, a round led by Accel that brings the companyโ€™s total funding to $22.5M. The husband and wife founded fintech, is building a digital bank for young professionals across Asia, and plans to use the new capital to expand its APAC footprint, grow its team in San Francisco and Manila, and deepen its AI driven underwriting and credit products for this demographic. - learn more
        • GroundForce Capital invested in RTZN Brands, the company behind Righteous Felon, to help scale its cleaner, craft-first jerky and meat snack portfolio. The funding follows a year of triple digit sales growth and expanding national distribution, and will support broader retail rollout, deeper club and grocery partnerships, and new high protein, clean ingredient products as Righteous Felon pushes to become a defining brand in the better for you meat snack category. - learn more
        • Amplify.la participated in Pryzmโ€™s $12.2M seed round, which was led by Andreessen Horowitzโ€™s American Dynamism fund with additional backing from XYZ Venture Capital and Forum Ventures. Pryzm is building an AI powered operating system for federal procurement that helps government agencies discover, evaluate, and acquire emerging technology faster, while giving contractors a unified view of opportunities and capture workflows. The company plans to use the funding to scale its platform across more defense and civilian agencies and grow its team in key hubs like Washington, D.C., Boston, and New York. - learn more
        • Saban Ventures joined Lin Healthโ€™s $11M oversubscribed Series A, backing the companyโ€™s virtual, neuroscience based chronic pain recovery platform alongside lead investor Proofpoint Capital and other new and existing backers. Lin Health plans to use the funding to advance product innovation, strengthen partnerships with major health systems and payers, and expand nationwide access to its non opioid, physician led and coach supported programs for conditions like migraines, IBS, and back and joint pain. - learn more

        LA Exits

        • tvScientific is being acquired by Pinterest, which has entered into a definitive agreement to buy the connected TV performance advertising platform as it pushes deeper into CTV. Pinterest plans to integrate tvScientificโ€™s outcome based CTV buying, automation and attribution tools into its Performance+ and other AI powered ad products, giving advertisers a clearer view of how connected TV contributes to performance campaigns. The deal, which is subject to regulatory review and expected to close in the first half of 2026, will see tvScientific continue operating under its own brand while tapping Pinterestโ€™s intent rich audience data across 600 million monthly users. - learn more
        • VuePlanner has been acquired by Cadent, which is folding the YouTube ad planning and measurement startup into its predictive advertising platform to strengthen what it calls a โ€œTotal Videoโ€ strategy across linear TV, CTV, and YouTube. The deal gives Cadentโ€™s clients access to VuePlannerโ€™s AI and expert curated tools for contextual targeting, quality scoring, and independent measurement on YouTube, so advertisers can plan and activate campaigns across premium creator content and traditional TV from a single, end to end workflow. - learn more
        • Cinapse is being acquired by Wrapbook and will join the film and TV payroll and production accounting platform to create a more โ€œconnected back officeโ€ that links scheduling, payroll, and accounts payable in one system. The deal brings Cinapseโ€™s modern, cloud based scheduling tools and track record across more than $6 billion in productions into Wrapbookโ€™s financial infrastructure, with the goal of giving producers, ADs, and studios a unified way to plan shoots and track every dollar from schedule to spend. - learn more

                        Download the dot.LA App

                        The Streaming Era Just Ate the Studio Era

                        ๐Ÿ”ฆ Spotlight

                        Hello Los Angeles!

                        In a week where everyone was already arguing about what โ€œthe future of entertainmentโ€ is supposed to look like, Netflix decided to skip the debate and buy a giant piece of the past and, possibly, the future. Netflix announced a definitive agreement to acquire Warner Bros. Discoveryโ€™s Studios and Streaming business, including Warner Bros. film and television studios plus HBO and HBO Max. This is not just another media merger. It is a power transfer, from the studio era where the gatekeepers were greenlight committees to the platform era where the gatekeepers are subscriber relationships, home screens, and retention math.

                        Here are the bones of the deal. WBD shareholders would receive $27.75 per share, made up of $23.25 in cash and $4.50 in Netflix stock, with the stock portion subject to a symmetrical collar. Netflix puts the transaction at roughly $72 billion in equity value and $82.7 billion in enterprise value, and expects it to close in 12 to 18 months, but only after WBD completes its planned separation of its Global Networks business into Discovery Global, now expected in Q3 2026.

                        Now zoom in on why this matters in Los Angeles specifically.

                        LAโ€™s creative engine is about to be run by a single, very efficient distribution machine

                        Warner Bros. is not just a studio. It is an institutional muscle memory for how to develop, package, and produce at scale, plus a library and franchises that can carry a business through multiple economic cycles. Netflix is not just a distributor. It is the largest direct to consumer entertainment subscription platform on earth, built around global reach, product iteration, and data feedback loops. Put them together and you get a company that can create, market, distribute, and monetize premium entertainment without needing anyone elseโ€™s permission.

                        That will sound exciting to some creators and terrifying to others, often for the same reason. When the same entity owns the audience relationship and the content factory, it can take bigger swings because it has more margin for error. It can also take fewer swings because it does not need to. The incentive shifts from โ€œWhat is culturally important?โ€ to โ€œWhat makes people stay?โ€ Those are sometimes the same question. Sometimes they are not.

                        This deal wonโ€™t be decided in a writersโ€™ room. Itโ€™ll be decided by regulators.

                        This is exactly the type of consolidation regulators have been itching to interrogate. A combined Netflix plus HBO Max instantly raises questions about market power, competition, and pricing, plus downstream effects on theaters, independent studios, and negotiating leverage with talent. Even if Netflix vows to maintain current operations and keep the consumer experience strong, the political story is straightforward: fewer giant buyers typically means less bargaining power for everyone who sells into the system.

                        Also worth noting, Reuters reports a termination fee of $5.8 billion under certain circumstances, which tells you both sides are bracing for a drawn out, high scrutiny process.

                        The quiet subtext: the bundle is coming back, just wearing a streaming hoodie

                        Netflix will almost certainly pitch this as more choice and better value. Regulators will hear less competition. Consumers will hear how much is this going to cost me. The most plausible end state is not a single mega app on day one. It is a reimagined bundle: separate brands, packaged pricing, shared sign on, cross promotion, and eventually tighter integration if the politics and churn math allow it.

                        The real disruption is not whether HBO Max keeps its name. It is whether Netflix becomes the default front door to premium scripted entertainment globally.

                        ๐Ÿค Venture Deals

                            LA Companies

                            • Castelion, a Torrance based defense technology startup, raised a $350M Series B round led by Altimeter Capital and Lightspeed Venture Partners, with participation from investors including Andreessen Horowitz, General Catalyst, Lavrock Ventures, Space VC, Avenir and Interlagos Capital. The money will be used to scale production of its Blackbeard hypersonic weapon, stand up its Project Ranger manufacturing campus in New Mexico, and support multiservice testing and integration with U.S. Army and Navy platforms starting in 2026. - learn more
                            • Antares announced a $96M Series B to accelerate an iterative โ€œbuild, test, iterateโ€ approach to developing nuclear reactors quickly, with the funding going toward hardware and subsystem testing, fuel fabrication, manufacturing, and the infrastructure to turn on a reactor. The company says it plans a low-power โ€œMark-0โ€ reactor demonstration in 2026 at Idaho National Laboratory, with a pathway to a full-power electricity-producing reactor as early as 2027 and a commercial prototype microreactor (โ€œMark-1โ€) after the Mark-0 milestone. - learn more

                              LA Venture Funds

                              • With FirstLook Partners participating, Flex raised a $60M Series B led by Portage, bringing its total equity raised to $105M to build an AI native finance platform for middle market business owners. The company says it will use the new funding to accelerate product expansion and scale its AI agent infrastructure across areas like private credit, business finance, personal finance, payments, and ERP. - learn more
                              • Led by MTech Capital, Curvestone AI raised a $4M seed round with participation from Boost Capital Partners, D2 Fund, and Portfolio Ventures to scale its AI automation platform for regulated industries like financial services, legal, and insurance. The company says itโ€™s tackling the โ€œcompound errorโ€ problem that makes multi step AI workflows unreliable, and will use the funding to accelerate product development and go to market expansion. - learn more
                              • Co-led by CIV, Unlimited Industries raised a $12M seed round (alongside Andreessen Horowitz) to scale its โ€œAI-native constructionโ€ approach to designing and building major infrastructure projects. The company says its platform can generate and evaluate massive numbers of design configurations to optimize for cost, safety, and performance, cutting pre-construction engineering timelines from months to weeks, and it is initially focusing on projects that rapidly expand U.S. power capacity for things like data centers, critical minerals, and advanced manufacturing. - learn more
                              • With Hyperion Capital participating (alongside Amplify Venture Partners, Spark Capital, Tamarack Global and others), Antithesis raised a $105M Series A led by Jane Street, which is both an investor and an existing customer. The company says it will use the capital to accelerate its deterministic simulation testing platform and scale go to market efforts across North America, Europe, and Asia, positioning the product as โ€œcritical infrastructureโ€ for teams running complex distributed systems. - learn more
                              • With XO Ventures participating, Orq.ai raised an oversubscribed โ‚ฌ5M seed round led by seed + speed Ventures and Galion.exe to help enterprises build, deploy, and manage production grade AI agents with stronger control over data, behavior, and compliance. The company says the funding will accelerate expansion of its platform, including its newly launched Agent Studio and managed runtime, as it pushes to close the โ€œAI production gapโ€ for companies moving beyond demos into real deployment. - learn more
                              • Untapped Ventures participated in Lemurian Labsโ€™ oversubscribed $28M Series A, co-led by Pebblebed Ventures and Hexagon, as the company builds a software-first platform designed to run AI workloads efficiently across any hardware and across edge, cloud, and on-prem environments. Lemurian says the funding will help it expand engineering, accelerate product development, and deepen ecosystem collaborations aimed at reducing vendor lock in and infrastructure costs. - learn more
                              • Fifth Wall and Park Rangers Capital participated in Ridleyโ€™s $6.4M seed round, which Fifth Wall led, backing the companyโ€™s push to rebuild the real estate process around consumers with fewer commission-heavy frictions. Ridley says the capital will help launch an AI-powered buy-side experience that surfaces private, for-sale, and โ€œsoon-to-be-listedโ€ homes using predictive analytics, while also expanding its commission-free seller tools and โ€œPreferred Agentsโ€ network for on-demand support. - learn more
                              • Anthos Capital participated in Kalshiโ€™s $1B Series E at an $11B valuation, a round led by Paradigm with other backers including Sequoia, Andreessen Horowitz, Meritech, IVP, ARK Invest, CapitalG, and Y Combinator. Kalshi says its trading volume now exceeds $1B per week across 3,500+ markets, and it will use the new capital to accelerate consumer adoption, integrate more brokerages, strike news partnerships, and expand product offerings. - learn more

                                              Download the dot.LA App

                                              Perelel, the LA startup quietly fixing womenโ€™s health

                                              ๐Ÿ”ฆ Spotlight

                                              Happy Friday LA!

                                              While the market obsesses over the latest AI tool, one of the most interesting checks this week went to something more basic and much harder to fake: womenโ€™s health.

                                              Perelel, a doctor founded, research backed supplement company for women, just raised 27 million dollars in growth funding led by Prelude Growth Partners, with existing investors including Unilever Ventures, Willow Growth Partners and Selva Ventures coming back in. Co founded by CEO Victoria Thain Gioia, who comes from a background in finance and operating roles at consumer brands, former media executive Alex Taylor, and OB GYN Dr. Banafsheh Bayati, the company has spent the last five years quietly building a profitable business that has doubled revenue year over year and has some of the strongest subscriber retention in its category.

                                              Image Source: Perelel

                                              The wellness aisle is crowded with influencer brands and one size fits all multivitamins. Perelel is trying to be the adult in the room. The team designs products with OB GYN input, clinical backing and formulas tailored to specific chapters of a womanโ€™s hormonal life, from fertility and pregnancy to postpartum, perimenopause and beyond. Most of its line now carries a Clean Label Project Purity Award, which is a polite way of saying theyโ€™re willing to have someone else check whatโ€™s actually in the bottle.

                                              This round is less about a splashy launch and more about upgrading the cap table and the support system. The founders used the raise to buy out early angel investors and bring in Prelude Growth, a women-founded firm with a track record in modern consumer health and beauty. The new capital is aimed at deeper research, more life stage specific products and broader distribution rather than chasing the trend of the month.

                                              In a category that has historically treated womenโ€™s health as an afterthought, a clinically serious, women led company raising growth capital to build a full lifecycle platform feels like a meaningful data point. Scroll down for this weekโ€™s LA venture deals, funds and acquisitions.

                                              ๐Ÿค Venture Deals

                                                  LA Venture Funds

                                                  • Anthos Capital participated in Kalshiโ€™s new $1B funding round, which values the CFTC-regulated prediction market platform at $11B and was led by returning investors Sequoia Capital and CapitalG alongside Andreessen Horowitz, Paradigm and Neo. The capital will help Kalshi scale its event-contracts exchange, expand beyond politics into areas like macro data and business events, and compete more aggressively with rival prediction platforms as institutional and retail interest in trading real-world outcomes grows. - learn more
                                                  • UP Partners participated in Point One Navigationโ€™s $35M Series C round, backing the San Francisco-based precise location startup alongside lead investor Khosla Ventures and fellow existing investors IA Ventures and Alumni Ventures. The company provides centimeter-level GNSS correction and positioning services for โ€œphysical AIโ€ applications like autonomous vehicles, robots and smart equipment, and plans to use the new funding to expand its Polaris RTK network, enhance its location platform and grow its team across R&D, OEM integrations and international operations. - learn more
                                                  • Embark Ventures participated in QSimulateโ€™s latest seed financing, which brings the Boston-based quantum simulation startupโ€™s total funding to just over $11M. The company also launched QUELO v2.3, a new generation of its quantum-powered drug discovery platform that uses real-time quantum mechanics to model drugโ€“protein interactions far faster than traditional methods, and it plans to use the capital to scale operations and support growing collaborations with major pharma and tech partners. - learn more
                                                  • Cultivate Next, Chipotle Mexican Grillโ€™s venture fund, participated in Athianโ€™s $4M Series A round, backing the Indianapolis-based startup alongside Ajinomoto Group Ventures, Mondelฤ“z Internationalโ€™s Sustainable Futures platform and a roster of existing strategic investors from across the livestock and food value chain. Athian, founded in 2022, operates a platform that aggregates, verifies and monetizes on-farm greenhouse gas reductions so food brands can hit their Scope 3 climate targets, and it says it has already facilitated $18M in payments to farmers as it expands its protocols, species coverage and international footprint. - learn more
                                                  • Fika Ventures joined Coverbaseโ€™s $16M Series A as a returning investor from the seed round, backing the company alongside lead investor Canapi Ventures and others. The San Francisco based startup uses AI agents to automate vendor procurement and third-party risk review for regulated enterprises, serving customers like Coinbase, Okta and Nationwide, and the new funding will help it expand into contract management, continuous security monitoring and a larger go-to-market team. - learn more
                                                  • BroadLight Capital and HeartBeat Ventures are among the investors backing Function Healthโ€™s $298M Series B round, which values the company at $2.5B and supports its push to become a new standard in proactive, data-driven healthcare. The Austin-based startup offers a membership platform that combines extensive lab testing with AI to help people track and manage their health, and itโ€™s using the new capital to launch its Medical Intelligence Lab, an initiative aimed at turning that data into personalized medical insights at scale. - learn more
                                                  • Hallwood Media joined Menlo Ventures and other investors in Sunoโ€™s $250M Series C round, which values the AI music startup at $2.45B. The Cambridge based company lets users generate fully produced songs from text prompts and is using the new funding to expand tools like its Suno Studio workstation and next-generation music models, even as it navigates high-profile copyright lawsuits from major record labels. - learn more
                                                  • Upfront Ventures joined the $7M seed round for alphaXiv, investing alongside co-leads Menlo Ventures and Haystack, plus Shakti VC, Conviction Embed and several high-profile angels. The San Francisco based company runs a platform that helps AI practitioners and researchers discover, compare and apply cutting-edge AI papers, benchmarks and implementations, and it plans to use the new funding to further bridge the gap between fast-moving AI research and real-world production deployments. - learn more
                                                  • Regeneration.vc joined TULUโ€™s $37M Series A extension as an existing investor, backing the company alongside GreenSoil PropTech Ventures, Bosch Ventures, New Era Capital Partners and others. TULU runs an AI powered product access platform that installs shared, IoT enabled units inside residential and commercial buildings so residents can rent or buy items like appliances, e scooters and household essentials on demand, and the new funding will help the company scale its โ€œTULU Brainโ€ data engine and expand its footprint beyond the 500,000 residents it already serves across North America and Europe. - learn more
                                                  • WndrCo has joined Method Securityโ€™s $26M combined seed and Series A round, alongside Andreessen Horowitz, General Catalyst, Blackstone Innovations and others. The startup, which operates out of New York and Washington DC, is building an autonomous cyber platform that combines offensive and defensive tools into a digital twin of an organization, helping US government agencies, the Department of Defense and large enterprises continuously test and strengthen their defenses against AI driven threats, a thesis that fits neatly with WndrCoโ€™s focus on infrastructure and security. - learn more
                                                  • Coral Tree Partners has led a new Series B round for KERV.ai, backing the Austin based company as it scales its AI-powered contextual commerce and video advertising platform. The funding will be used to invest in R&D, technology, talent and infrastructure so KERV.ai can further expand its interactive, shoppable video solutions and first-party data targeting tools for brands, agencies and publishers, while pushing into new markets and strategic partnerships. - learn more
                                                  • CIM Group and Group 11 are backing Vennโ€™s new $52M Series B, with CIM co-leading the round alongside NOA and Group 11 re-upping as an existing investor. The New York and Tel Aviv based company builds an operating system for multifamily housing that unifies data and workflows so landlords and operators can run buildings more efficiently and treat them like modern consumer brands. Over the last 18 months, Venn says it has expanded across dozens of U.S. states, partnered with hundreds of owners and operators, and grown annual recurring revenue ninefold, setting up this round to fuel further product development and market expansion. - learn more
                                                  • Walkabout Ventures led Barkerโ€™s $3.5M seed round, backing the New York based fintech as it builds warrantied AI valuations for illiquid, hard-to-price assets in asset-backed lending. Barkerโ€™s platform uses an โ€œagentic valuation systemโ€ and insurance from Munich Re to warranty its AI-generated prices on assets like aircraft, equipment, art and GPUs, so lenders are protected if the collateral ultimately sells for less than the model predicted, and the new funding will help the company expand into more asset classes and deepen partnerships across banks and private lenders. - learn more
                                                  • Freeflow Ventures joined Erg Bioโ€™s $6.5M seed round, investing alongside lead Azolla Ventures, Chevron Technology Ventures, Plug and Play and other strategic backers. Erg Bio is developing its Aspire platform, a flexible, low-temperature pretreatment and catalytic process that turns agricultural and forestry waste into intermediates for synthetic aviation fuel and critical biobased chemicals, and the new capital will help scale the technology, expand engineering and bioprocessing teams, and move toward pilot-scale demos. - learn more
                                                  • Pinegrove Venture Partners participated in Rampโ€™s new $300M financing round, joining Lightspeed Venture Partners and a long list of existing and new backers as the companyโ€™s valuation hit $32B. The New York based spend management and corporate card platform now generates over $1B in annualized revenue, serves more than 50,000 business customers and processes upwards of $100B in annual purchase volume, and this fresh capital will support continued product expansion and enterprise growth. - learn more
                                                  • Alexandria Venture Investments and B Capital joined Solve Therapeuticsโ€™ new $120M financing round, backing the San Diego based biotech alongside lead investor Yosemite and a broader syndicate that includes Merck & Co. and other life sciences funds. The company is developing next-generation antibody-drug conjugates for solid tumors using its proprietary CloakLink linker platform, and it plans to use the capital to advance its lead programs SLV-154 and SLV-324 through Phase 1b trials and further build out its ADC and diagnostics pipeline. - learn more
                                                  • Factorial Funds joined Sakana AIโ€™s $135M Series B round, backing the Tokyo-based startup as it doubles down on building efficient, Japan-focused AI models rather than chasing ever-larger, compute-heavy systems. The financing, which values Sakana at about $2.65B, will help expand its โ€œsustainable AIโ€ research and grow its team as it rolls out sovereign, culturally tailored AI solutions for Japanese enterprises and sectors like finance, manufacturing, and government. - learn more
                                                  • Smash Capital joined AVP and other investors in backing Flatpayโ€™s latest round, which raised roughly โ‚ฌ145โ€“170M and crowned the Danish SMB payments startup as Europeโ€™s newest fintech unicorn at around a โ‚ฌ1.5B valuation. The company, which offers flat-rate card terminals and POS systems for small merchants, has scaled to roughly 60,000 customers and over โ‚ฌ100M in ARR, and will use the fresh capital to accelerate European expansion, deepen its product stack and significantly grow headcount. - learn more
                                                  • Fusion joined No Barrierโ€™s oversubscribed $2.7M seed round, investing alongside lead backers A-Squared Ventures, Esplanade Ventures and Rock Health Capital to scale the companyโ€™s AI-first approach to medical interpretation. The San Francisco based startup integrates real-time, HIPAA-compliant language interpretation into hospital systems and EHRs across 40+ languages, and will use the new funding to expand deployment across U.S. care settings and further reduce health disparities for patients with limited English proficiency. - learn more
                                                  • Matter Venture Partners joined Vertex Ventures and other global investors in backing Ruochuang Technologyโ€™s Pre A round, which totals tens of millions of dollars to fuel the companyโ€™s next stage of growth. The startup develops low speed robotics and related IoT hardware, spanning technology R and D, device manufacturing and sales, and this new capital will help it deepen intelligent hardware research and expand its market footprint as demand for smart manufacturing and IoT applications accelerates. - learn more
                                                  • B Capital joined Shipdayโ€™s $7M Series A as a participating investor, re-upping after leading the companyโ€™s 2023 seed round and backing the Menlo Parkโ€“based startup alongside co-leads ECP Growth and Ibex Investors. Shipday provides an AI-powered last-mile delivery and logistics platform for SMBs like restaurants and local retailers, and it plans to use the new funding to build out features such as its AgentFlow automation engine, deepen integrations, and expand its global reach beyond the 5,000 businesses it already serves in 100+ countries. - learn more
                                                  • MANTIS Venture Capital participated in Bedrock Dataโ€™s $25M Series A round, joining lead investor Greylock Partners alongside Mangusta Capital, Pier 88 Investment Partners and others to back the Menlo Park based data security startup. Bedrock Data provides an AI-native, data-centric security and governance platform powered by its โ€œMetadata Lake,โ€ and it plans to use the new funding to accelerate product development and expand go-to-market efforts as enterprises look to secure data across cloud, SaaS and AI systems at multi-petabyte scale. - learn more
                                                  • TenOneTen Ventures and Wedbush Ventures joined Meadow AIโ€™s $6M in total funding, including a $4.5M seed round they backed alongside co-lead Leadout Ventures and other investors. The Seattle-based startup is emerging from stealth with a multimodal AI platform that helps restaurants and retailers monitor real-time operations and automate โ€œsecret shopperโ€ audits across 10โ€“300-location chains, already driving more than $2.5M in contracted ARR as it targets further growth in physical retail. - learn more

                                                        LA Exits

                                                        • Neotech, a long-time provider of high-reliability electronic manufacturing services, has been acquired by private equity firm Arkview Capital in a deal that marks a major new chapter for the company. With Arkview as its new owner, Neotech plans to strengthen its balance sheet, invest in next-generation manufacturing, and expand its capabilities across core markets like defense, aerospace, medical and industrial electronics, while continuing to emphasize quality, reliability and customer service. - learn more

                                                                    Download the dot.LA App

                                                                    RELATEDEDITOR'S PICKS
                                                                    Trending