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Cart.com raises $240M in equity, debt funding after HQ move

VC comes from Legacy Knight Capital Partners, Citi Ventures, others; J.P. Morgan tapped for debt


After moving HQ to Austin, Cart.com raises $240M in equity, debt funding
Omair Tariq CEO (left), Chief Revenue Officer Randy Ray, Chief People Officer Sara Patterson and General Counsel Gregg Goldstein.
STARLIC_WILLIAMS

When Cart.com Inc. secured $98 million in new venture capital funding last summer, several interested investors weren't yet ready to get in on the deal.

Since then, Cart has added to its acquisition streak and moved its headquarters from Houston to Austin. Now, venture firms are thirsty to own a share of the booming e-commerce company.

The startup announced Feb. 3 it has raised $240 million in additional venture and debt funding, bringing the young company's total funding to $380 million. And it added several new firms to its capitalization table that were interested in joining the Series B round in August but needed more time.

"Those investors approached us very quickly after that round was done, wanting to know if we would be amenable to doing a follow-on round shortly thereafter, which is how the round came together so quickly," said Frank Parker, who joined the company as CFO in November.

The company wouldn't divulge the equity/debt funding split, but noted it wasn't heavily weighted toward either. Multifamily venture capital firm Legacy Knight Capital Partners, which has offices in Dallas and Houston, led the venture portion of the round. Other VCs included funds held by banking giants such as Citi Ventures and Visa.

On the debt side, the funding came from J.P. Morgan and TriplePoint Capital. The company declined to share its valuation.

Cart.com, founded in Houston in late 2020 by CEO Omair Tariq and Jim Jacobsen, has developed what it calls an e-commerce-as-a-service platform that helps businesses develop and scale online sales via online stores, digital marketing, fulfillment, payment services and analytics.

The company has made 10 acquisitions already, including two acquisitions announced in January, and it's poised to continue growing via acquisition.

"A lot of the investment that we're gonna be making over the next couple of years will be continuing to build out on our long-term strategy and strengthening the acquisitions and integration of acquisitions into the greater Cart ecosystem," said Jay B. Sauceda, head of corporate communications and creative direction at Cart. "One big area that we did have a large acquisition recently was in the fulfillment space. And we see it as being critically important for the success of the merchants' growth, for them to have a strong relationship with their fulfillment provider. And as such, our investments on the logistic side will continue internally as we grow our network and increase the footprint that we have across the United States."

At the time of its headquarters move in December, Cart had about 400 employees, including about 150 in Austin. Executives expect the headcount to grow to about 1,000 employees and are accelerating the pace of hiring, Parker said, noting they are hiring remotely but also focused on growing the Austin team.

CEO Tariq — formerly COO of Houston success story Blinds.com, which was acquired by Home Depot in 2014 — and several other employees remain at the original Houston office. Before the headquarters move was announced, Cart.com was one of Houston's fastest-growing startups.


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