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Venture Capital Insights & News

Deep dives into the VC landscape: fund strategies, top investors, deal flow, and everything founders and LPs need to navigate venture capital.

Venture capital powers the innovation economy. Whether you are a founder preparing your next fundraise, an LP evaluating fund managers, or an aspiring VC looking to break into the industry, understanding how VC works is essential. We cover the European VC ecosystem from seed to growth stage.

Latest VC News

AI fintech funding

Galdera Labs Raises €1.5M to Build AI-Powered Financial Modelling Platform

The European fintech sector continues to attract early-stage capital, with AI-powered financial modelling emerging as a particularly active frontier for investor interest. As finance teams across high-growth organisations grapple with the limitations of static spreadsheets and fragmented planning tools, a new generation of startups is building intelligent infrastructure to replace legacy workflows. Stockholm-based Galdera Labs has now entered this space with a €1.5 million pre-seed round to develop an AI-native financial modelling platform designed for growth-stage finance teams. The funding will support platform development, reasoning infrastructure buildout, and an initial customer rollout targeting fast-growing companies with complex financial operations. Galdera’s platform combines a high-performance calculation engine with a semantic memory layer that links financial data directly to underlying business context, assumptions, and strategic decisions — enabling finance teams to query models in natural language and simulate complex scenarios in minutes rather than weeks. Klarna Veterans Back AI Financial Modelling Vision The pre-seed round was led by J12 Ventures, with participation from Antler and a roster of angel investors drawn from notable European technology companies including Klarna, DeepL, Stripe, and Plata. The investor composition reflects strong confidence in the founding team’s pedigree and the market opportunity for intelligent financial planning infrastructure. Galdera’s three co-founders — Evan Rumpza (CEO), Mattia Scolari (CFO), and Giovanni Casula (CTO) — met at Klarna during the fintech giant’s most intensive growth phase. Responsible for financial planning across 26 markets, the team experienced first-hand how manual processes and fragmented Excel models struggled to keep pace as business conditions shifted faster than traditional models could be rebuilt. To manage the complexity, they built an internal system at Klarna that replaced the static planning cycle with a continuously updated model — enabling what previously required large analyst teams to be handled by just three people, supporting the company through both capital raises and IPO preparations. The lessons learned from that experience became the foundation for Galdera Labs. “We’ve personally sat with 50 spreadsheets at two in the morning using tools that were supposed to solve the problem but didn’t. That is the infrastructure we are building with Galdera,” said Evan Rumpza, CEO and co-founder of Galdera Labs. Building AI Finance Tools for the Next Generation of CFOs The market for AI finance tools and financial modelling software is evolving rapidly as organisations demand more dynamic planning capabilities. Traditional spreadsheet-based approaches, while flexible, often create fragmented workflows where assumptions become outdated and institutional knowledge is lost between budget cycles. Galdera’s platform addresses this gap with a two-layer architecture: a powerful calculation engine capable of handling large data volumes, paired with a semantic memory layer that preserves the reasoning behind financial decisions over time. The platform is designed to function as an always-on financial forecast that automatically updates as business conditions change. Users configure scenarios once, and the model recalculates impacts across revenue, costs, margins, and other key metrics in real time. This approach positions Galdera within a growing wave of European fintech startups applying artificial intelligence not merely as an overlay on existing tools, but as a foundational redesign of how financial planning operates. With the launch, Galdera is opening its platform to its first customers: fast-growing companies and organisations with complex operations where the pace of decision-making has outgrown the tools finance teams traditionally rely on. Early adopters already include companies such as DeasyLabs, Unify, and Counsel. The pre-seed round positions Galdera Labs at an early but promising stage in a sector where demand for intelligent, context-aware financial infrastructure is accelerating across European markets. As AI continues to reshape enterprise workflows, the intersection of financial modelling and machine reasoning represents a significant opportunity for startups capable of delivering genuine operational value to scaling businesses. Summary

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AevoLoop circular plastics recycling technology funding announcement with plastic waste processing

Allday Goods Raises £765K to Scale Recycled-Plastic Kitchen Knife Brand

The sustainable consumer goods sector is witnessing growing investor appetite as environmentally conscious brands prove they can combine purpose with profitability. East London-based Allday Goods, the cult kitchen knife brand that transforms plastic waste into chef-quality blades, has raised £765,000 in a seed round led by FIGR Ventures to scale its operations from artisan favourite to mainstream kitchen staple. Founded in 2021 by ex-chef Hugo Worsley, Allday Goods manufactures kitchen knives with handles crafted entirely from recycled plastic waste — sourced from Maldon Salt buckets, milk bottle handles, discarded plant containers, and fishing nets washed up on British shores. The brand, which started in Worsley’s parents’ shed using a repurposed toastie maker, has already achieved profitability with minimal external investment. Products consistently sell out within minutes during online drops, and queues have formed at London pop-ups, reflecting a level of consumer demand that few sustainable brands can match at this stage. FIGR Ventures Leads Seed Round with Sustainability-Focused Backers The £765,000 round was led by FIGR Ventures, with participation from Anotherway Ventures, Machroes Holdings — the family office of Lord Mervyn Davies — and angel investor Tom Gozney, founder of the premium pizza oven brand Gozney. The investor mix signals confidence in Allday Goods’ ability to bridge the gap between sustainable manufacturing and scalable consumer product design. Allday Goods’ knives pair handles made from 100% recycled food-grade polypropylene with British and Japanese steel blades. The company collects, cleans, shreds, and remoulds plastic waste into distinctive, colourful handles that carry visible traces of their former lives — a design choice that has become central to the brand’s identity. Each knife effectively diverts plastic from landfill whilst delivering professional-grade performance. Worsley commented on the raise, noting that the team had built the brand slowly and intentionally, and that securing backing from investors they genuinely admire represents a significant milestone for the next chapter of growth. From Cult Following to Mainstream Market Opportunity Allday Goods has already demonstrated significant commercial traction without substantial marketing spend. The brand’s high-profile collaborations with Ottolenghi, Soho House, Maldon Salt, Kerrygold, and Paul Smith have positioned it at the intersection of culinary craftsmanship and design culture. Features in The World of Interiors and Esquire have further cemented its reputation among discerning consumers who value both aesthetics and environmental responsibility. The fresh capital will be deployed to scale production capacity, expand the product range, and accelerate the transition from limited-edition drops to consistent retail availability. The challenge for Allday Goods will be maintaining the artisan quality and brand mystique that fuelled its cult status whilst meeting the demands of a broader consumer base — a tension that many direct-to-consumer brands have struggled to navigate. The broader sustainable kitchenware market continues to attract both consumer interest and investor capital across Europe. As regulatory pressure on single-use plastics intensifies and consumers increasingly seek products that align with their environmental values, brands like Allday Goods that demonstrate genuine circularity in their manufacturing processes are well-positioned to capture meaningful market share. Summary Company: Allday GoodsHeadquarters: East London, United KingdomFounded: 2021Founder: Hugo WorsleyRound: SeedAmount: £765,000Lead Investor: FIGR VenturesOther Investors: Anotherway Ventures, Machroes Holdings, Tom GozneyUse of Funds: Scale production, expand product range, transition to mainstream retail availability

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Reflex Aerospace raises €50M in space tech Series A funding

Arkadia Space Secures €14.5M EIC Backing for Green Propulsion Tech

Europe’s space technology sector is experiencing a strategic shift as the continent moves to reduce its dependence on toxic propellants and build sovereign capabilities in satellite operations. Amid tightening EU regulations on hydrazine-based systems and growing demand for sustainable orbital infrastructure, a new generation of deeptech startups is emerging to fill critical gaps in the European space supply chain. Arkadia Space, the Castellón-based propulsion startup, has secured €14.5 million through the European Innovation Council (EIC) Accelerator — one of the EU’s most competitive deeptech funding instruments. The package comprises a €2.5 million grant, €6 million in equity from the EIC Fund, and €6 million in private investment. Arkadia is the first Spanish space company to access EIC Accelerator funding, selected from 923 applications as one of just 61 startups in this round. EIC Accelerator backs hydrogen peroxide propulsion The funding signals the European Commission’s recognition of hydrogen peroxide propulsion as a strategically important technology. Arkadia’s flagship product, the DARK propulsion system, is a hypergolic bipropellant engine that combines high-concentration hydrogen peroxide with a proprietary green fuel. The system ignites spontaneously upon propellant contact, eliminating the need for complex ignition hardware and reducing operational and refuelling costs by more than 60 per cent compared with conventional hydrazine-based solutions. Founded in 2020 by Francho García (CEO) and Ismael Gutierrez (CTO), the company has spent five years developing alternatives to the toxic propellants that have long dominated satellite manoeuvring. The cost differential is striking: filling a satellite tank with hydrazine typically costs around €2 million, whereas Arkadia’s hydrogen peroxide-based operations run under €50,000 — including all ground equipment. Arkadia achieved a critical milestone in March 2025 when its DARK system became the first hydrogen peroxide-based propulsion technology to fly in orbit from Europe. Launched aboard a D-Orbit ION Satellite Carrier on SpaceX’s Transporter-13 mission from Vandenberg Space Force Base, the system successfully completed in-orbit test firings that matched ground test data, confirming its viability for commercial satellite operations. “This recognition confirms that we are on the right path and gives us a tremendous boost to commercialise the technology as early as next year,” said Francho García, co-founder and CEO of Arkadia Space. European spacetech builds momentum with strategic partnerships The EIC backing comes as Arkadia deepens its ties with the European space establishment. The company holds four contracts with the European Space Agency (ESA), including work under the Future Launchers Preparatory Programme. Perhaps most notably, Arkadia has secured a supply agreement with MaiaSpace, the ArianeGroup-backed reusable launch vehicle programme, to provide 250-newton reaction control thrusters — a contract that positions the startup within Europe’s next-generation launch architecture. The company has also developed ARIEL, a 250-newton monopropellant thruster that reached technology readiness level 6 within two years, further demonstrating the versatility of its hydrogen peroxide platform across both satellite and launcher applications. Arkadia previously raised a €2.8 million seed round in October 2023, led by Draper B1 with participation from Expansion Ventures. The latest EIC funding brings total capital raised to approximately €17.3 million, providing a substantial runway to move from demonstration to commercialisation. The company plans to expand its testing infrastructure at Castellón Airport and targets production of 300 to 400 propulsion systems annually, with a view to becoming a vertically integrated European supplier of green propulsion technology. Summary Company: Arkadia SpaceHeadquarters: Castellón, SpainFounded: 2020Round: EIC Accelerator (grant + equity + private)Amount: €14.5 millionLead: European Innovation CouncilPrevious funding: €2.8M seed (Draper B1, 2023)Use of funds: Commercialisation of green propulsion, R&D expansion, testing infrastructure, scaling operations

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Kabilio raises €4M for AI accounting tools in Spain

Theia Insights Raises $8M Series A to Map the Global Economy with AI

The intersection of artificial intelligence and financial infrastructure continues to attract significant venture capital attention across Europe, as institutional investors seek more sophisticated tools to navigate increasingly complex global markets. Cambridge-based deeptech startup Theia Insights has secured $8 million in a Series A round to advance its AI-powered platform that creates dynamic, real-time maps of the global economy for the investment industry. The round brings Theia Insights’ total funding to $14.5 million since its founding in 2022. The fresh capital will be directed towards expanding into private markets, scaling its research and engineering capabilities, and accelerating global commercial growth. Founded by former Amazon Alexa scientist Dr Ye Tian alongside co-founders Isami Ito and Dr James Thorne, the company has built proprietary technology that processes vast quantities of corporate data to represent companies across multiple evolving sectors rather than constraining them to single industry labels. MiddleGame Ventures Leads Strategic Investment Round The Series A round was led by MiddleGame Ventures, a specialist fintech investor, with participation from Further Ventures and existing backer Unusual Ventures. The investor mix reflects a deliberate strategy to bring both financial services expertise and deep technology understanding to the cap table. Unusual Ventures, which led Theia Insights’ earlier $6.5 million seed round in 2024, has continued to back the company’s vision of building foundational AI infrastructure for global capital markets. Theia Insights has already secured notable commercial traction in the institutional investment space. The company’s technology powers S&P Dow Jones Indices’ Atlas Indices and is distributed through Nasdaq Datalink for mutual fund thematic exposure data. Its client base spans global index providers, asset managers, hedge funds, and investment banks, positioning it at the infrastructure layer of financial decision-making. The company is also a portfolio company of Fidelity International Strategic Ventures and has been selected for the AWS Generative AI Accelerator programme. Dr Ye Tian, CEO and co-founder, explained the company’s fundamental thesis: “We must first see the economy clearly, not in fragments but as an interconnected whole.” This philosophy underpins a platform that processes regulatory filings, earnings transcripts, and financial disclosures to construct multidimensional representations of companies, moving beyond the limitations of traditional static classification systems that assign businesses a single industry label. AI-Powered Financial Intelligence Gains Momentum in Europe Theia Insights’ core product suite comprises four solutions that address distinct institutional needs. Its Dynamic Industry Classification system reveals how companies actually operate across multiple sectors, whilst its Thematic Factor Risk Model analyses stock movements through more than 200 thematic and style factors. The Concept2Universe tool converts investment ideas into actionable portfolios with evidence-based rankings, and its Theme Watch Indices track daily returns across over 200 global themes. The funding arrives at a time when European deeptech startups are increasingly demonstrating that foundational AI research can translate into commercially viable products for regulated industries. The financial services sector, in particular, has shown growing appetite for AI tools that go beyond simple automation to provide genuinely novel analytical capabilities. Traditional classification systems, which have underpinned investment analysis for decades, are increasingly seen as inadequate for capturing the complexity of modern businesses that operate across multiple sectors simultaneously. With partnerships already established with major financial infrastructure providers and a technology stack built on advanced NLP, large language models, and knowledge graph architecture, Theia Insights is well positioned to capitalise on the growing demand for AI-driven investment intelligence. The Series A funding should enable the company to broaden its reach into private markets and deepen its presence across the global investment ecosystem. Summary Company: Theia InsightsHeadquarters: Cambridge, United KingdomFounded: 2022Round: Series AAmount: $8 million (total raised: $14.5 million)Lead Investor: MiddleGame VenturesOther Investors: Further Ventures, Unusual VenturesUse of Funds: Private markets expansion, R&D, global commercial growth

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Agri food pilot

Flink Raises $100M as Quick Commerce Stabilises in Europe

Europe’s quick commerce sector is entering a new phase of maturity, with profitability replacing growth-at-all-costs as the defining metric for investors. After years of aggressive expansion, consolidation, and high-profile collapses, the sector’s survivors are now demonstrating that rapid grocery delivery can work as a sustainable business. Berlin-based Flink, one of the last independent quick commerce operators standing in Europe, has secured approximately $100 million in new growth capital at a $900 million valuation. The funding round, led by existing investor Prosus, will strengthen Flink’s financial position and support a targeted expansion across its core markets of Germany and the Netherlands. The company plans to open new fulfilment hubs in selected German regions throughout 2026, applying strict profitability and density criteria to each new location rather than pursuing unchecked geographic expansion. Prosus Leads Round as Investor Confidence Returns to Quick Commerce The round was led by Prosus, the Amsterdam-listed technology investment group and long-standing Flink backer, with participation from Btomorrow Ventures, the corporate venture arm of British American Tobacco. Strategic partner REWE, one of Germany’s largest grocery retailers, also remains closely involved in Flink’s operations through a supply chain partnership that gives the company a significant edge in product sourcing and logistics. The investment brings Flink’s total funding to approximately $1.4 billion. Notably, the $900 million valuation represents a substantial reduction from the company’s peak valuation of $5 billion in May 2022, reflecting the broader market correction that swept through the quick commerce sector as pandemic-era demand normalised and investor sentiment shifted decisively towards unit economics over top-line growth. Yet the fact that Prosus continues to lead funding rounds signals genuine confidence in Flink’s restructured business model. The company confirms it is now operating profitably at EBITDA level, a milestone that few quick commerce operators have achieved. Flink reports an average basket size exceeding €45, suggesting it has successfully moved beyond impulse purchases towards serving regular household grocery needs. Quick Commerce Consolidation Reshapes European Market Flink’s funding arrives against a backdrop of dramatic consolidation in the European quick commerce landscape. Gorillas, once a fierce Berlin-based rival, was absorbed by Turkish competitor Getir in late 2023. Getir itself subsequently imploded under financial pressure and was sold to Uber in February 2026, effectively removing the two most prominent competitors from Flink’s core markets. This consolidation has left Flink as one of the last independent quick commerce operators in Europe, with a dense network of fulfilment hubs across approximately 80 cities in Germany and the Netherlands. The company’s expansion plans target 110 cities by 2027, though management has emphasised that each new hub must meet rigorous profitability thresholds before launch. The broader European quick commerce market continues to grow, with Germany’s segment projected to reach $11.6 billion by 2026. Flink’s disciplined approach to expansion, combined with its REWE supply chain partnership and demonstrated path to profitability, positions the company to capture a meaningful share of this growing market without repeating the overextension that plagued earlier entrants. Flink’s journey from pandemic-era losses of €515 million in 2022 to EBITDA profitability represents one of the more compelling turnaround stories in European tech. Whether the company can sustain this trajectory while expanding into new cities will be the key test in the months ahead. Summary Company Flink Headquarters Berlin, Germany Founded 2021 Round Growth Amount $100M Valuation $900M Lead Investor Prosus Other Investors Btomorrow Ventures Total Funding ~$1.4B Use of Funds Expansion of fulfilment hubs in Germany and the Netherlands

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Types of Venture Capital Funds

Early Stage VC

Investing at pre-seed and seed stage. Writing first checks, high risk, high reward. Thesis-driven and founder-focused.

Examples

Kima Ventures, Seedcamp, Point Nine Capital

Growth Stage VC

Series A to C investments. Scaling proven models, larger check sizes, board seats. Focus on unit economics.

Examples

Accel, Index Ventures, Balderton Capital

Corporate VC

Strategic investments by large corporations. Access to distribution, partnerships, and industry expertise.

Examples

Google Ventures, Salesforce Ventures, Intel Capital

Impact VC

Investing for financial returns alongside social or environmental impact. ESG-driven thesis.

Examples

Demeter, Astanor Ventures, 2150

Browse VC by Country

🇫🇷 France

🇩🇪 Germany

🇬🇧 UK

🇪🇸 Spain

🇮🇹 Italy

🇳🇱 Netherlands

🇸🇪 Nordics

🇨🇭 Switzerland

🇮🇪 Ireland

🇵🇹 Portugal

🇧🇪 Belgium

🇪🇺 CEE

🇱🇹 Baltics

🇦🇪 MENA

VC Glossary

An individual who invests personal capital in startups, typically at the earliest stages.
The share of profits (typically 20%) that fund managers earn above the fund’s return hurdle.
The thorough investigation of a company before making an investment decision.
An investment fund that invests in other VC funds rather than directly in companies.
The managing partner of a VC fund who makes investment decisions and manages the fund.
A metric used to measure the profitability of an investment over time.
An investor who commits capital to a VC fund but does not participate in management.
The ratio of total value returned to total capital invested.
Company valuation before (pre) and after (post) a new investment round.
A non-binding agreement outlining the key terms of a proposed investment.

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