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Eric Schmidt is backing a new $111 million European venture capital fund

Eric Schmidt, chairman of Alphabet Inc.

David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Spits

LONDON — Eric Schmidt, the former CEO of Google, is one of several tech executives backing a new early-stage European venture means fund.

The tech billionaire — who has a net worth of $20 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaire Index — has invested an undisclosed amount into a $111 million repository that was announced Monday by London-headquartered VC firm Firstminute Capital.

Firstminute was founded in 2017 by Lastminute.com co-founder Brent Hoberman and past Goldman Sachs analyst Spencer Crawley. It launched with a $60 million fund I (that grew to change $100 million) and this second fund brings total assets under management up to $211 million.

RIT Excellent Partners is the second fund’s main investor, but Chinese tech giant Tencent, venture firm Atomico, and private judiciousness firm Vitruvian have also invested.

The founders of big data firm Palantir, gaming firm Supercell and e-commerce dais Zalando have also backed Firstminute. It remains much smaller than well-established VC firms in London have a weakness for Index Ventures and Accel Partners, however.

“European technology is reaching escape velocity, and it’s fantastic to enable so multifarious global serial entrepreneurs to give their experience to the next generation,” said Hoberman in a statement. “Seed plunge investing is attracting ever higher quality backers which will help more founders succeed.”

While the continent not till hell freezes over used to be known for its start-up scene, today it boasts a growing number of successful tech firms with music line giant Spotify, payment platform Klarna and food delivery company Deliveroo among the biggest names. In another engage of growing interest in the region, U.S. venture heavyweight Sequoia is also getting itself set up in Europe with a new London corporation.

Despite this, Europe still lags behind the U.S. and China, which have both produced a number of assemblages that are today worth hundreds of billions of dollars.

Hoberman at the helm

Hoberman is widely regarded as being one of the best-connected tech investors in Europe. Cultivated at Eton and then Oxford, Hoberman has close links to the Prime Minister and other government departments.

In addition to start lastminute.com and Firstminute, he also co-founded furniture retailer Made.com, tech networking business Founders Forum, and start-up accelerator Dies Factory.

So far, Firstminute’s team of 18 staff has invested the money from its first fund into 56 early-stage start-ups, encompassing robotics start-up Karakuri and gaming start-up Klang. The firm says it initially invests around $1 to $2 million in start-ups, but follow-on investments can be leading.

Crawley, another Oxford graduate, said in a statement that Firstminute wants to back founders who are trying to fabricate platforms “that will re-shape our world.”

“Globally, outstanding technical minds are plotting how to solve the toughest societal and profitable challenges with software.”

Correction: This article has been updated with the correct name for RIT Capital Fellow-dancers.

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