BBG Ventures, the New York-based venture capital firm known for supporting female founders, has raised a new $60 million fund. Co-founders Susan Lyne and Nisha Dua, who launched BBG Ventures in 2014 with a vision of investing in women-led startups, announced that the fund’s focus now includes founders from diverse backgrounds across race, income, and age. Meeting Market Needs in a Challenging Economy Amid a significant decline in venture funding for underrepresented groups, BBG Ventures’ decision to diversify its founder support comes at a critical time. In the first half
London-based fintech unicorn Zepz, formerly known as WorldRemit, has raised $267 million from new and existing investors to expand its global cross-border payments platform. Zepz’s fundraising round was led by Accel, with participation from Leapfrog, TCV, and Coller Capital, as first reported by Bloomberg. The International Financial Corporation, a member of the World Bank Group, has also committed to invest up to $20 million. Zepz not disclose its valuation in this round but was valued at $5 billion after its $292 million Series E round in 2021. Simplifying Money Transfers
Crunchbase has announced the expansion of its Diversity Spotlight feature to include companies in Europe. This expansion will allow up to one million additional companies on Crunchbase to add Diversity Spotlight tags to their profiles, enhancing the visibility of diverse founders and investors across the continent. Crunchbase’s Diversity Spotlight Crunchbase introduced its Diversity Spotlight feature in 2020 to centralize and highlight data about companies with diverse leadership and the investors who fund them. This feature indicates diversity in an organization’s leadership team, including founders and CEOs for startups and managing
Pinterest has announced that it is expanding its Creator Inclusion Fund to the Pinterest Inclusion Fund, allowing founders to join. Pinterest Inclusion Fund The now-called Pinterest Inclusion Fund began in 2021 to help give more opportunities to underrepresented content creators. It has now expanded as they have teamed up with Shopify’s Build Black and Build Native programs to allow small business owners who are from or who serve underrepresented backgrounds to apply for the Creator Inclusion Fund. Previously, only traditional content creators applied. “The Pinterest Inclusion Fund is focused on