Google
is launching a venture capital fund to invest in promising European technology
companies.
The
$100m (£58m) fund will "invest in the best ideas from the best European
entrepreneurs", according to Bill Maris, managing partner at Google
Ventures, overseeing the project.
"We
believe Europe's start-up scene has enormous potential."
The
new operation will be based near London's Silicon Roundabout start-up district.
But
Google is open to
further geographic expansion in the future.
"We've
seen compelling new companies emerge from places like London, Paris, Berlin,
the Nordic region and beyond - SoundCloud, Spotify, Supercell and many
others," Mr Maris writes in a blog to announce the new fund.
Financial return
The
new fund will be an arm of the existing US-based fund, Google Ventures, and
will be run by a team which includes angel investor Peter Read, Code.org UK
head Avid Larizadeh and entrepreneur Tom Hulme.
Eze
Vidra, who set up the "Google Campus" in London, an incubator for
technology enterprises, is also a partner.
MG
Siegler, the American venture capitalist, will liaise between the new fund and
Google's original US-based fund.
That
fund, set up five years ago, has put money into more than 250 enterprises,
including taxi company Uber and consumer electronics maker Nest, as well as
enterprises promoting better healthcare and affordable solar power generation.
Google
said it could not yet predict what type of companies would receive funding in
Europe, but that the investments were for financial return rather than strategic
and usually in technology and the life sciences.
BBC
Business
No comments:
Post a Comment