Samsung Catalyst Fund
Samsung Catalyst Fund is a company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at Samsung Catalyst Fund.
Samsung Catalyst Fund is a company.
Key people at Samsung Catalyst Fund.
Key people at Samsung Catalyst Fund.
The Samsung Catalyst Fund (SCF) is Samsung Electronics' evergreen venture capital fund, headquartered in San Jose, California, with offices in Seoul, Tel Aviv, and Paris. It invests in deep technology startups focused on artificial intelligence (AI), big data, data centers, cloud and edge computing, quantum computing, 5G, automotive, robotics, sensors, IoT, and digital health, aiming to drive innovation that supports Samsung's businesses while fostering co-prosperity for startups, investors, and society.[1][2][4][5]
SCF's mission emphasizes transforming disruptive ideas into scalable products via capital, Samsung's global resources, mentorship, and networking, beyond pure financial returns. Its philosophy balances strategic value for Samsung—such as new business creation in semiconductors and components—with strong financial upside, having made over 60 investments and exits like Ring (acquired by Amazon) and SoundHound.[1][2][4][5] This positions SCF as a key player in the startup ecosystem, enabling life-changing technologies and fueling growth in high-impact sectors.[2][3]
SCF launched in February 2013 at an event in Menlo Park, California, as a fully owned investment arm distinct from Samsung Ventures and Samsung NEXT.[1][6] It emerged from Samsung's Silicon Valley expansion via the Samsung Strategy and Innovation Center (SSIC, est. 2012), which focuses on open innovation, investments, and acquisitions to accelerate disruptive technologies.[6]
Key figures include managing director Dede Goldschmidt, who has articulated SCF's midpoint strategy between strategic and financial investing.[4] The fund evolved from early focus on deep tech and data to broader domains like metaverse and quantum computing, building a portfolio of over 70 investments by leveraging Samsung's ecosystem for acquisitions like LoopPay (Samsung Pay), SmartThings, and Viv.[1][4][6]
SCF rides the deep tech and data economy wave, investing in foundational infrastructure for AI data centers, accelerated computing, 5G/edge, and quantum amid exploding demand for efficient, scalable tech.[2][4][5] Timing aligns with post-pandemic shifts to hybrid cloud, autonomous systems, and AI-driven everything, where Samsung's hardware dominance amplifies startup scale.[4]
Market forces like AI proliferation, energy-efficient computing needs (e.g., Axiado's TCU), and chiplet interconnects (Eliyan) favor SCF's picks, influencing the ecosystem by bridging corporate resources with agile innovators.[2][5] It shapes CVC trends, proving hybrids of strategy and returns can spawn new Samsung businesses while advancing societal tech like digital health (Ada) and IoT (Afero).[3][4]
SCF is poised to deepen bets on AI infrastructure, quantum, and sensors as data centers scale and edge AI integrates into devices, autos, and health. Emerging trends like energy-efficient AI and metaverse will define its path, potentially yielding more blockbuster exits amid maturing deep tech markets.[4][5]
Its influence may evolve toward leading co-investments and acquisitions, solidifying Samsung's pivot to platform enablers—echoing its origins as a 2013 innovator now fueling the next data economy era.[1][2]
| Date | Company | Round | Lead Investor(s) | Co-Investor(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jan 28, 2026 | Eliyan | $50.0M Venture Round | — | AMD, Arm Holdings, Coherent, Intel Capital, Meta |