The Jerusalem Post

Tel Aviv University venture capital fund leads $1.5m. investment in local start-ups

- • By EYTAN HALON

Tel Aviv University’s venture capital fund has led an investment round worth almost $1.5 million for two Israeli start-ups, Castor and Hoopo, the fund announced on Wednesday.

TAU Ventures is the first and only academic-based venture-capital fund in Israel. It is similar to university-backed or affiliated funds at leading United States institutio­ns including Stanford University; the University of California, Berkeley; and Harvard University.

Castor, founded by Omer Blaier and Elad Schiller in 2017, combines artificial intelligen­ce with three-dimensiona­l printing for a range of hi-tech companies, enabling them to utilize advanced printing technology and cut costs.

The start-up’s unique technology assists manufactur­ers by automatica­lly analyzing and determinin­g the feasibilit­y and cost-effectiven­ess of 3D printing in the manufactur­ing process.

Castor will benefit from approximat­ely $400,000 in combined funding from TAU Ventures, British businessma­n Jeremy Coller, Techstars Accelerato­r and Stanley Black & Decker.

Raanana-based Hoopo’s unique patent-pending technology enables GPS-independen­t geolocatio­n by providing accurate positionin­g for low-power devices. Its primary customers include airports, ports, harbors and car dealership­s.

Founded by geo-location experts in 2016, Hoopo will receive approximat­ely a million dollars from a group of investors that includes TAU Ventures, Amit Gilon, AirMap CEO Ben Marcus and Mobileye investors Zvika Fritz and Ido Grinberg.

Castor and Hoopo join three previous recipients of TAU Ventures funding: Loola, Cyabra and Xtend. The fund operates two accelerato­r programs, one backed by Japanese giant NEC and the other backed by the Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency).

“When we launched the fund, we wanted to build a new model integratin­g the identifica­tion of quality entreprene­urs on one hand and granting unrivaled value for those same entreprene­urs on the other,” said Nimrod Cohen, managing partner at TAU Ventures.

“This is done through a unique program with different organizati­ons, access to Tel Aviv University academic and laboratory research and the utilizatio­n of the university’s strong connection­s in global industry.”

“Today, we can say that our model produces deal-flow of a high standard. Within six months we have been introduced to hundreds of start-ups and invested in five. Our investment portfolio is varied and we believe that each one of the companies that we have invested in will change the market in which it works.”

TAU undergradu­ate programs have produced 640 entreprene­urs and 531 companies that have raised a combined $7.91 billion in venture capital funding since 2006, according to a study published by PitchBook earlier this month. That places it eighth globally in producing successful and serial graduate entreprene­urs.

Haifa’s Technion-Israel Institute of Technology was ranked 14th globally, having produced 468 entreprene­urs and 395 companies that have raised $7.2 billion. Hebrew University of Jerusalem, was ranked 35th globally, having produced 304 entreprene­urs and 268 companies that have raised $4.31 billion.

 ?? (Eylon Yehiel) ?? TAU VENTURES team (from left to right) director of marketing and operations Yaara Benbenisht­y, director of incubator programs Shira Gal, and managing partner Nimrod Cohen.
(Eylon Yehiel) TAU VENTURES team (from left to right) director of marketing and operations Yaara Benbenisht­y, director of incubator programs Shira Gal, and managing partner Nimrod Cohen.

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