Israel health fund aMoon II raises $600 million

Launched in 2018, aMoon II said in May it had secured a $250 million investment commitment from Credit Suisse’s asset management and private banking divisions.

Marius Nacht (L) and Yair Schindel (R) (photo credit: AMOON)
Marius Nacht (L) and Yair Schindel (R)
(photo credit: AMOON)
Israel-based healthcare fund aMoon II has received commitments of $600 million from investors and aims to raise up to $750 million by its close in February, according to an investor document obtained by Reuters.
This is up from an original $500 million target set by the fund, which is investing in mid- to late-stage companies in digital health, medical devices and biopharma in Israel, the United States and Europe.
Launched in 2018, aMoon II said in May it had secured a $250 million investment commitment from Credit Suisse’s asset management and private banking divisions.
The fund intends to invest $10 million to $40 million in 15 to 20 companies over the next five years.
aMoon was founded in 2016 by Marius Nacht, co-founder and chairman of Check Point Software Technologies, and Yair Schindel. Their first fund, the $200 million aMoon I, invested in 20 startups.
A third fund, aMoon Velocity, which will focus on early-stage startups, is open only to investors in aMoon II and has a fundraising target of $120 million.
Nacht is investing $360 million of his own money in the three funds, according to the document.
Company officials on Wednesday declined to comment.
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Israel has about 1,500 life science companies, a number expected to reach 2,500 in the next five years as the government provides tax breaks and other financial incentives.

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Israel also has two of the largest healthcare databases in the world and multinationals such as Novartis, Johnson & Johnson and Merck Serono operate research centers there.
aMoon II has invested in four companies, including $10.6 million in cancer therapy firm Ayala Pharmaceuticals, in which Bristol-Myers Squibb co-invested. aMoon’s investment was worth $145 million according to Ayala’s last fundraising round.