Despite the traditional summer slowdown, venture capital activity remained robust this week, with several large funding rounds underscoring continued investor appetite for artificial intelligence, robotics, enterprise software, blockchain infrastructure, and biotechnology.
While the largest U.S. financings went to enterprise software provider NinjaOne and blockchain technology company Digital Asset, Europe produced the week’s biggest transactions. Germany-based Neura Robotics secured up to $1.4 billion, while Finnish space technology company Iceye raised $520 million.
Neura Robotics Leads Global Funding Activity with $1.4 Billion Round
German robotics company Neura Robotics announced up to $1.4 billion in Series C financing, making it the largest disclosed venture funding round of the week.
The company develops AI-powered robotic infrastructure designed to enable machines to learn, collaborate, and operate autonomously in real-world environments. The investment highlights growing global interest in robotics as artificial intelligence increasingly moves from software applications into physical systems and industrial automation.
Iceye Raises $520 Million to Expand Satellite Monitoring Capabilities
Finland-based Iceye secured $520 million in Series F funding led by General Atlantic, valuing the company at more than $12 billion.
The company operates a constellation of Earth observation satellites used for environmental monitoring, disaster response, defense applications, and infrastructure analysis. The transaction reflects continued investor confidence in the commercial space sector and satellite-based data businesses.
NinjaOne Reaches $12.3 Billion Valuation
Austin-based NinjaOne raised more than $400 million in a Series C extension, achieving a valuation of approximately $12.3 billion.
The company provides endpoint management and IT operations software for enterprises. According to the company, revenue expanded by more than 70% during 2025, while profitability was achieved during the first quarter of 2026.
The financing further reinforces enterprise software’s position as one of the most resilient segments of the technology market.
Digital Asset Secures $355 Million for Institutional Blockchain Infrastructure
New York-based Digital Asset raised $355 million in late-stage financing led by Andreessen Horowitz’s crypto investment arm, a16z crypto.
Founded in 2014, the company develops blockchain infrastructure for financial institutions and capital markets. The latest investment brings its known funding total to at least $847 million, according to Crunchbase data.
The transaction signals continued institutional interest in blockchain applications beyond cryptocurrencies, particularly in areas such as financial market infrastructure and asset tokenization.
AI Infrastructure Continues to Attract Capital
Las Vegas-based TensorWave raised $350 million in Series B funding led by Magnetar Capital and AMD Ventures.
The company provides AI cloud infrastructure powered by AMD hardware for machine learning training and inference workloads. The investment reflects growing demand for alternative AI computing providers as enterprises seek additional options beyond dominant market players.
Biotechnology Remains Active
Among healthcare transactions, Beren Therapeutics secured $300 million through a combination of equity and debt financing. The California-based company develops therapies targeting diseases associated with defective cholesterol transport.
Meanwhile, San Francisco-based SonoThera raised $125 million in Series B funding to advance its ultrasound-mediated genetic medicine platform.
Cambridge, Massachusetts-based City Therapeutics also completed a $99.5 million Series B round to support development of RNA interference (RNAi) therapies.
Robotics and AI Agents Gain Momentum
New York-based Standard Bots raised $200 million in Series C funding, reaching a $1 billion valuation.
The company develops AI-native industrial robots designed for manufacturing and automation environments.
Separately, MainFunc, the company behind AI workplace platform Genspark, reportedly secured $100 million in Series B extension financing at a valuation of approximately $2.6 billion, highlighting continued investor enthusiasm for agentic AI technologies.
Medical Technology and Accessibility Solutions Attract Funding
GT Medical Technologies raised $100 million in Series E financing to support expansion of its GammaTile radiation therapy platform used in brain tumor surgeries.
Rylo, developer of an application designed for deaf and hard-of-hearing individuals, secured $85 million in growth financing backed by General Catalyst, Canaan, and existing investors.
Venture Capital Outlook
The week’s funding activity illustrates how capital continues flowing toward sectors positioned at the intersection of artificial intelligence, automation, enterprise productivity, healthcare innovation, blockchain infrastructure, and space technology.
While macroeconomic uncertainty remains a factor for investors, large-scale financings suggest that companies demonstrating strong growth, technological differentiation, or strategic infrastructure value continue to attract significant institutional backing.
Largest Venture Capital Rounds Announced (June 6–12)
| Company | Sector | Funding |
|---|---|---|
| Neura Robotics | Robotics & AI | $1.4B |
| Iceye | Space Technology | $520M |
| NinjaOne | Enterprise Software | $400M+ |
| Digital Asset | Blockchain Infrastructure | $355M |
| TensorWave | AI Cloud Infrastructure | $350M |
| Beren Therapeutics | Biotechnology | $300M |
| Standard Bots | Robotics | $200M |
| SonoThera | Genetic Medicine | $125M |
| GT Medical Technologies | Medical Devices | $100M |
| MainFunc (Genspark) | Agentic AI | $100M |
| City Therapeutics | Biotechnology | $99.5M |
| Rylo | Accessibility Technology | $85M |
Methodology: Funding data is based on financing rounds announced between June 6 and June 12 and tracked by Crunchbase. Figures represent publicly disclosed transactions and may be subject to updates as additional information becomes available.






