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Yozma

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Yozma, Yozma Program, or Yozma Fund was a venture capital organization in Israel that initially started out as a government funded program in 1993 to help kick start venture capital, angel investing, and private equity in Israel's economy. $20 million of government subsidies went to the Yozma Fund, the other $80 million the government provided went to match other foreign and domestic venture capital firms, at 40%, to create their own venture capital funds in the Israel. The VC companies could buy-back the governments equity stake over a 5 year period, and most did. The Yozma Fund privatized in 1997 and became the Yozma Group.[1]

Background

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Inbal is a government owned insurance company that underwrote and guaranteed up to 70% of losses for venture capital firms from 1992-1998. The Israeli Government helped start and fund business incubators and an R&D cluster during the 1990s.

Yozma funds

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Yozma Inicial Funds
Name Est. Capital Foreign LP LP Country Portfolio Exits Exit Rate
Eurofund 1994 $20M Daimler-Benz, DEG Germany 14 7 50%
Gemini 1993 $36M Advent Venture Partners USA 25 13 52%
Inventech 1993 $20M Van Leer Group Netherlands 33 16 48%
Jerusalem Venture Partners 1993 $20M Oxton USA 12 10 83%
Medica 1995 $15M MVP USA 10 5 50%
Nitzanim 1994 $20M AVX, Kyocera Japan, Japan 13 7 54%
Polaris (Pitango) 1993 $20M CMS USA 19 13 68%
Star 1993 $20M TVM, Siemens Germany 27 15 56%
Vertex Holdings 1996 $39M Vertex Int., Singapore tech USA, Singapore 29 16 55%
Walden 1993 $33M Walden International USA 21 10 48%
Yozma 1993 $20M None 16 10 63%
Total $263M 217 122 56%

See also

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References

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