Mountain Nazca
Mountain Nazca is a company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at Mountain Nazca.
Mountain Nazca is a company.
Key people at Mountain Nazca.
Key people at Mountain Nazca.
Mountain Nazca (now operating as Nazca) is an early-stage venture capital firm that empowers bold entrepreneurs building transformative technology-enabled businesses, primarily in Latin America and the US.[1][3][5] Its mission centers on founder-centric empowerment through multi-stage capital, global networks, market intelligence, strategy insights, talent sourcing, and partnerships, with a bottom-up approach to balance capital and talent for regional economic impact.[1][5] The firm is sector-agnostic, targeting breakout propositions in Latin America's vast markets and US innovations, and maintains operations in hubs like Mexico City, San Francisco, Bogota, Buenos Aires, Santiago, and global outposts via Mountain Partners in Berlin, Zurich, Jakarta, and beyond.[1][2] By backing proven founders on merit, it fosters social and economic success in the startup ecosystem, with a track record of 115 investments, notable exits (peaking in 2016), and co-investments alongside players like Start-Up Chile and Y Combinator.[4]
Mountain Nazca traces its roots to early 2014, founded as Nazca Ventures by prominent Latin American tech entrepreneurs including Alan Farcas, Eduardo Amadeo, Felipe Henriquez Meyer, Hector Sepulveda Reyes Retana, Santiago Caniggia Bengolea, and Vanesa Kolodziej.[1][4][5] Headquartered initially in Santiago, Chile, with a main office there and later emphasis on Mexico City, it emerged to address gaps in regional venture support.[1][2][4] A pivotal evolution came through its merger with global firm Mountain Partners, enhancing capabilities with international hubs and robust networks.[1] This rebranding to Nazca reflects a sharpened focus on revolutionary empowerment for Mexico and Latin American founders, building on early traction in financial services and IT sectors with average deals of $1-5M and startups aged 2-3 years.[3][4][5]
Mountain Nazca rides the wave of Latin America's booming tech ecosystem, capitalizing on untapped markets in countries like Mexico, Brazil, Colombia, Argentina, and Chile amid rising digital adoption and global ambitions.[1][4] Its timing aligns with post-pandemic venture growth in emerging regions, where local insights meet US-style innovation, countering capital shortages through bottom-up investing in tech, cleantech, biotech, fintech, and IT.[1][4][8] Market forces like increasing exits, government programs (e.g., Start-Up Chile), and co-investment trends amplify its influence, enabling portfolio companies to scale globally and transform regional economies via job creation and tech disruption.[4][5]
Nazca is poised to deepen its dominance in LatAm VC by leveraging global partnerships for larger funds and follow-ons, targeting high-growth sectors amid AI, fintech, and cleantech surges.[1][5][8] Trends like regional talent mobility, US-LatAm cross-border deals, and sustainable impact investing will shape its path, potentially boosting exit rates beyond historical peaks.[4] Its influence may evolve into ecosystem leadership, mentoring next-gen funds while empowering more merit-based founders to rival Silicon Valley outputs—reinforcing its role as the bold backer of tomorrow's breakouts.[1][3]