Swizzle Ventures has closed its Fund I at $6.6 million, bypassing its initial $3 million target, Jessica Kamada, the firm’s founder, told TechCrunch.
Back in December, TechCrunch reported that the firm, which quietly launched in 2023, was raising and has already bypassed $5 million, per its SEC filing. The thesis of Fund I will focus on women’s health and wealth, touching upon issues such as caregiving and finances.
Kamada told TechCrunch that 70% of the fund’s LPs are women and 50% are experts in the focus of its thesis. The firm will cut checks ranging from $100,000 to $200,000 at a pre-seed and seed level. It’s already backed 11 companies so far and hopes to invest in 30 total from Fund I.
Kamada, who is based in Seattle, has a background in marketing and startup advising. She posted on LinkedIn over a year ago that she had left her job after nearly eight years without a plan for what to do next.
Swizzle’s Fund I enters the world of venture capital at an important time. Caregiving is undergoing a crisis; women’s health is a hot topic, especially after the overturn of Roe; and many women are gearing up to inherit what experts predict will be a historic boom in capital as the great “wealth transfer” will soon come underway.
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