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Pensions backing Australian venture fund

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SYDNEY: Australia’s largest pensions backed Square Peg Capital Pty’s latest funding round as the firm looks to boost investment­s in startups joining the wave of innovation sparked by the coronaviru­s.

Australian­super Pty and Host-plus Pty were among investors in Square Peg’s A$350mil (Us$242mil) funding round targeting early-stage technology companies, the Melbourne-based firm said in an emailed statement Tuesday. The raise makes Square Peg Australia’s largest venture firm, with more than A$1bil under management, it said.

The fresh funds will help Square Peg back firms that are tapping the massive changes brought on by Covid-19, from increased online shopping and education, to shifts in healthcare and new work arrangemen­ts, said Square Peg co-founder and partner Paul Bassat.

“In the space of two months, we have seen the equivalent of a decade’s worth of change in the take-up of online business models,” he said in the statement.

“Covid-19 is a catalyst for the accelerati­on of long-term trends that have existed for a long time.”

Bassat cited some of the companies that have thrived during the pandemic, such as U.S. software firms Slack Technologi­es Inc. and Zoom Video Communicat­ions Inc., and Canadian e-commerce firm Shopify Inc. Square Peg-backed Fiverr Internatio­nal Ltd. – a freelance marketplac­e based in Israel – has seen its share price more than triple since it listed last year.

Square Peg’s raise signals investors still favor Australia’s venture capital industry despite heightened fears that investment from the nation’s A$2.73 trillion in retirement savings will slow amid the coronaviru­s-induced recession. Local venture firms raised almost A$4 billion in the past four years thanks to a flood of money from pension funds taking bets on early-stage companies.

The fresh capital will support Square Peg’s fourth fund and to fund opportunit­ies it’s already spotted from earlier financings. The firm has invested in tech-unicorns Canva Pty. and cross-boarder financing firm Airwallex Pty. The fund, created in 2012, is targeting companies in Australia as well as Israel and Southeast Asia.

Having cash on hand allows the firm to fund investment­s on more favorable terms as the virus-induced market rout lowers private valuations. Previous downturns have bred unicorns including Aconex Ltd, Atlassian Corp and Culture Amp Pty.

Funds that managed to raise capital in the wake of the global financial crisis outperform­ed their peers by about 34% in the following five years, Tempus Partners founder and managing director Alister Coleman said.

“It would be short sighted to not be giving yourself an opportunit­y to be capitalisi­ng on the creativity that comes out of these periods,” Coleman said by phone.

This is the first investment in Square Peg by Australian­super, the nation’s biggest pension fund. Hostplus has backed two other rounds.

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