New Stack Ventures Raises $42.6 Million For Second Fund

By Annie Baker • Mar 16, 2022
  • New Stack Ventures recently announced it raised $42.6 million for its second fund. These are the details.

New Stack Ventures – an early-stage venture fund dedicated to investing in Silicon Valley outsiders – recently announced it has raised $42.6 million for its second fund.

This funding is the second-largest single-partner (solo capitalist) funds ever raised between the coasts – outside of San Francisco/Silicon Valley, Los Angeles, and New York City – and follows a $6 million raise for the first fund in 2018.

New Stack Ventures is known for making angel, pre-seed, and seed-stage investments into B2B SaaS startups transforming large legacy industries like finance, healthcare, cyber security, supply chain, construction, and real estate. And the firm has a current portfolio of 38 companies including Hologram, Cybrary, Fairmarkit, and Covie. New Stack also intentionally seeks deals outside of Los Angeles, New York City, and the San Francisco Bay Area. The Chicago-based fund is naturally drawn to the Midwest as a focus region–notable area investments include Tovala, TripScout, and Hologram–but it takes a global lens to invest, with recent deals in Toronto and Guadalajara.

The Midwest is seeing an explosion of tech startups and unicorns, akin to the Bay Area several years ago. There are more unicorns in the Midwest today than there were in the Bay Area in 2014–the year founder and General Partner Nick Moran launched the first VC podcast The Full Ratchet. Now Chicago is home to 20 tech unicorns, with 12 produced in 2021 alone. And this makes Chicago competitive with better-known tech hubs: only the San Francisco Bay Area minted more unicorns last year.

Moran came to invest from the corporate world and does not have the typical background of most tech investors. Previously Moran worked for Danaher in M&A and Product Management, where he developed one of the most successful products in the company’s history — an analytical device for testing compounds in drinking water.

Moran did not spin out from an existing venture fund. And drawing on his experience as a former operator and angel investor, Moran and his team have built the fund full-stack themselves, including internal and external software systems to help identify the most promising startups. In keeping with their belief that closed networks don’t scale, the firm recently launched an outbound software sourcing tool called Seeker – which finds a startup the moment it has a digital presence (website, Form D filing, etc.), sourcing 9,000 potential deals to date. And New Stack’s public-facing inbound software tool VC Rank, which provides founders with customized lists of VC funds, has sourced 2,600 potential deals to date.

KEY QUOTE:

“From the beginning, our investing strategy has been centered around disrupting the VC model. We are a fund of firsts: the first venture podcast, an early AngelList syndicate, and first to use software to find deals. We don’t believe in walled gardens–we believe in creating open systems, providing supportive capital and changing the standard venture model for the future.”

— Nick Moran, Founder and General Partner, New Stack Ventures