Peter Thiel's Founders Fund backs US$130m Japan tech fund

Move comes as country shakes off its image as tough place for entrepreneurs

Published Wed, Sep 1, 2021 · 05:50 AM

Tokyo

BILLIONAIRE Peter Thiel's Founders Fund is backing a new US$130 million vehicle by Coral Capital to invest in Japan's technology startups as the country shakes off its image as a tough place for entrepreneurs.

Coral Capital's third fund will focus on early-stage financing from seed to Series A, founding partner and chief executive officer James Riney said in an interview.

Initial round investments will range between 30 million yen (S$366,939) and 500 million yen and up to five billion yen for follow-up checks.

More than 30 per cent of the money comes from overseas investors such as Founders Fund and Singapore's Pavilion Capital, Mr Riney said. Domestic investors include Mizuho Bank, Mitsubishi Estate, Shinsei Bank, Dai-ichi Life Holdings, and Gree.

Japan has come a long way from the time when would-be entrepreneurs needed an equivalent of US$100,000 in capital just to register a company.

Startups in the country raised US$4.76 billion last year, just short of the 2019 record and more than double the amount five years prior, according to Tokyo-based Initial.

Overseas venture capital firms such as Sequoia Capital, Airbus Ventures and Light Street Capital have also taken notice, investing in the latest crop of unicorns, venture companies worth more than US$1 billion.

"Japan is a very overlooked market and has been for a long time," Mr Riney said. "Now, because you have more capital available, you are seeing companies forgoing the IPO, raising larger rounds and going for larger exits."

Mr Riney, 32, opened his first Japan fund in 2016 in partnership with Silicon Valley's 500 Startups, raising 3.8 billion yen.

That same team then launched Coral Capital in 2019.

The second fund raised six billion yen from many of the same limited partners, including Taizo Son, one of Japan's best-known seed investors and the younger brother of Masayoshi Son.

Coral Capital's investment strategy has been to focus on either hyper-local companies, businesses that take advantage of Japan-specific cultural or regulatory differences, or startups with proprietary technologies that can scale globally, Mr Riney explained.

Its portfolio across the two funds totals more than 80 ventures, including automation service SmartHR, one of the latest Japanese startups to reach unicorn status.

"Historically, when you wanted to raise US$20 million plus in Japan, you didn't have that many options," Mr Riney said. "So what would happen is that you would have these companies go public quite early and then cross the US$1 billion mark."

That's one of the reasons the country still lags far behind its Asian neighbors and the United States when it comes to creating major private startups.

There are nearly 800 so-called unicorns in the world, according to CB Insights, with about 400 in the US, more than 150 in China and about 40 in India. Only six made the list from Japan, the world's third-largest economy, the same number as from Hong Kong.

Another limiting factor has been a lack of ambition, Mr Riney noted.

"In Japan, aiming for unicorn status has not been common sense until the past two years," he added. "Now there is capital and the change of ambition, that's why we believe there will be way more unicorns to come." BLOOMBERG

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