Editor's note: The final figures for Memphis Meats' Series B funding round totaled to over $186 million, exceeding all previous investments in the cultivated meat industry as of May 2020.







Today, Memphis Meats announced a $161 million Series B (see GFI’s media statement ), a sign of monumental progress and investor confidence in cultivated meat.

This infusion of cash is greater than all of the publicly disclosed investment into the cultivated meat industry so far. Memphis Meats’ Series B—led by Softbank, Temasek, and Norwest Venture Partners—is historic for both doubling the industry’s investments to date and also sending a strong signal about the future of cultivated meat.





History of Memphis Meats

In 2015, cardiologist Dr. Uma Valeti and stem cell biologist Nicholas Genovese created Memphis Meats, with the vision of transforming the animal agriculture industry. Within months, Memphis Meats produced the first cultivated beef meatball and went on to produce the first chicken and duck as well.





In early 2016, Memphis Meats completed the IndieBio accelerator and then raised more than $3 million in February. The following year, in 2017, the company raised a $17 million Series A from top Sand Hill Road VC fund DFJ, as well as meat industry giants Tyson Foods and Cargill, plus investor-celebrities that include Bill Gates and Richard Branson. In addition to Softbank, Temasek, Norwest Venture Partners, and the aforementioned Series A funders, Tyson Foods, Cargill, Gates, and Branson, other new and returning Series B investors include Threshold Ventures, Finistere, Future Ventures, Kimbal Musk, Fifty Years, CPT Capital, KBW Ventures, and Vulcan Capital.





GFI’s Executive Director Bruce Friedrich (left) got a chance to taste cultivated chicken produced by Memphis Meats with CEO Uma Valeti (center) and Memphis Meats investor Suzy Welch (right) back in 2016. The verdict according to Friedrich: It's delicious!





What this means for Memphis Meats’ future





Memphis Meats expects to use the funds to build a pilot production facility, continue to grow its world-class team, and to hit a major milestone of launching products into the market, according to their media statement





Not only does this investment supply Memphis Meats with capital to scale, but it could also signal potential partnerships with their new investors’ portfolio companies.





State of the industry and a look ahead





There are now at least 43 cultivated meat companies on five continents producing 15 types of meat, plus a handful of B2B companies. BlueNalu, Future Meat Technologies, Finless Foods, Wild Type, and Aleph Farms all raised $10 to 20 million Series As in 2019. Memphis Meats, however, is the first company to raise a Series B round.

As monumental as this news is, Memphis Meats and the current crop of cultivated meat innovators won’t be able to do it alone.

Even more investment is needed. More entrepreneurs are needed. More students are needed. Government support is needed . GFI hopes and expects that this fundraising round will serve as the spark that ignites a Cambrian explosion in the industry—a shift from gradual to exponential change.

As it becomes increasingly evident that the multi-trillion dollar animal agriculture industry is changing to one that is more sustainable, just, economical, and secure, we predict a massive influx of investment all along the plant-based and cultivated meat value chain.



