Deal of the week Battery companies continue to land absolutely bonkers amounts of money from investors and governments. Take Verkor, the Renault-backed French battery company that produces pouch and cylindrical battery modules for electric vehicles and energy-storage sites. The company said it secured "more than €2 billion" ($2.1 billion) to speed up construction of its Dunkirk gigafactory. Yeah, you read that right. The huge sum includes an €850 million Series C funding round as well as €600 million in loans from the EU's European Investment Bank. The $2.15 billion figure also counts €650 million in yet-to-be-approved French subsides, pending a final OK from the European Commission. Macquarie, French infrastructure investor Meridiam and Renault participated in the Series C round. As TechCrunch reporter Harri Weber notes, this eye-popping round follows other sizable raises from battery startups, including Lyten, which announced this week that its raised $200 million in a Series B round. That round was led by Prime Movers Labs, a venture firm from OpenGov co-founder Dakin Sloss, and included investments from Stellantis, FedEx and Honeywell. Other deals that got my attention . . . Dance, the German startup that offers electric bikes and mopeds via subscription packages, added a handful of investors to top up its recent €12 million funding round and said it now has 10,000 active and paying members. Evolectric, a Long Beach, California–based EV tech company, raised $15 million from Seismic Capital. Kolors, a Mexico City–based startup that connects intercity bus riders with bus drivers, acquired B2B van pooling provider Urbvan for $12 million cash. Revel, the car subscription startup from Spain, raised €115 million ($123 million). The funding is a combination of debt and equity: €100 million is structured financing earmarked to build out the car network, and €15 million is equity invested in the business itself. Investors include KKR, Santander Consumer Finance and others that are not being named. Turo, the peer-to-peer car-sharing company, maybe just maybe is getting ready for the IPO roadshow, if its latest filing is any indication and if a report from Bloomberg citing unnamed sources is to be believed. But don’t hold your breath. We’ve been here before. The company first filed its S-1 (intentions to go public) in January 2022, and it repeatedly put a pin in those plans as it awaited better economic conditions. Is now the time? |
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