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Italian company Bending Spoons flew largely under the radar — until last month. In a span of 48 hours, the company announced the acquisition of AOL and a massive $270 million raise, quadrupling its valuation to $11 billion, up from $2.55 billion set in early 2024.
Bending Spoons has grown rapidly by acquiring stagnating tech brands like Evernote, Meetup, and Vimeo, then turning them profitable through aggressive cost-cutting and price increases. While the company’s approach is similar to private equity, there is one key difference: Bending Spoons has no plans to sell these businesses.
Andrew Dumont, the founder and CEO of Curious, a firm that also acquires and revitalizes what he calls “venture zombies,” is convinced this “hold forever” strategy will become increasingly prominent in the coming years as AI-native startups make older VC-backed software businesses less relevant.
“Our belief is that the venture power law, in which 80% of companies ‘fail,’ produces many great businesses, even if they’re not unicorns,” Dumont told TechCrunch.
Wow!! Are they publicly listed? I wonder if they will buy dead bitcoin companies.
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Doesn't look like it.
Bending Spoons is a private company and its stock is not available on public exchanges. To invest in Bending Spoons, one must be an accredited investor and can do so through private secondary marketplaces like Nasdaq Private Market, Forge Global, or Hiive. The company recently acquired Vimeo in a deal that was completed on November 24, 2025, but this does not make Bending Spoons' stock publicly traded.
~AI google search
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Dumont doesn’t expect a lot of new competition. Turning profits out of stagnation isn’t easy. “It’s a ton of work,”
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