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KISAB Mandates Venionaire Capital to Structure Nine-Figure Private Equity Transaction

Vienna-based Venionaire has been commissioned by Kiselkarbid i Stockholm AB (“KISAB”) to structure and support the company’s next financing round. The mandate includes investor relations, investor communications, and strategic preparation for the financing, with a focus on growth-oriented private equity and strategic investors. The goal is to raise a total of more than 100 million euros, with a majority acquisition by an investor also being an option.

KISAB Mandates Venionaire Capital to Structure Nine-Figure Private Equity Transaction

KISAB and Venionaire Capital have entered into a strategic partnership to support the next growth phase of one of Europe’s most promising semiconductor companies.

Vienna-based Venionaire Capital AG has been appointed by Swedish silicon carbide (SiC) specialist Kiselkarbid i Stockholm AB (KISAB) to structure and support the company’s upcoming financing round. The mandate includes investor relations, investor communications, and transaction preparation aimed at growth-oriented private equity firms and strategic investors.

The financing initiative is designed around a nine-figure euro transaction, with both minority growth capital investments and a potential majority acquisition by a strategic or financial investor remaining possible outcomes.

KISAB and Venionaire: Supporting Europe’s Semiconductor Future

The collaboration between KISAB and Venionaire comes at a time when demand for advanced semiconductor materials is accelerating worldwide.

Headquartered in Kista, near Stockholm, KISAB develops and manufactures advanced silicon carbide semiconductor materials. The company’s products are used in high-growth sectors including electric mobility, power grid infrastructure, renewable energy systems, and industrial electronics.

As power electronics become increasingly important for electrification and energy efficiency, silicon carbide has emerged as a critical enabling technology.

KISAB’s 8-Inch Silicon Carbide Platform

At the center of KISAB’s growth strategy is its advanced 8-inch BPD-free n-type silicon carbide wafer platform.

The transition from smaller wafer formats to 8-inch production represents a significant technological milestone for the semiconductor industry. Larger wafers enable improved manufacturing efficiency, lower production costs, and increased scalability for next-generation power semiconductor devices.

As demand continues to grow, KISAB is preparing to significantly expand its production capabilities.

Building on a Strong Investor Base

KISAB has previously raised approximately €24 million through several financing rounds.

Publicly disclosed investors include:

  • Fairpoint Capital
  • Industrifonden
  • Ingka GreenTech
  • LPE

Through this new mandate, Venionaire Capital will support KISAB in refining its equity story, structuring investor outreach, and positioning the company for its next phase of industrial expansion.

How the KISAB-Venionaire Partnership Started

The relationship between KISAB and Venionaire originated through international business networks.

The collaboration was initiated following a visit by Venionaire Capital CEO Berthold Baurek-Karlic to Phoenix, Arizona, where he delivered a presentation to the International Trade Committee of the Arizona House of Representatives.

“We are delighted to support one of Europe’s most promising technology companies on its growth journey. It may seem somewhat paradoxical that two European companies connected through the United States, but it also demonstrates that pan-European collaboration is more important than ever. Such cooperation is essential if Europe aims to remain competitive with the United States as an economic region.”

— Berthold Baurek-Karlic, CEO, Venionaire Capital AG

Strengthening Europe’s Deep-Tech Ecosystem

The partnership between KISAB and Venionaire highlights the growing importance of European semiconductor innovation.

Global demand for advanced power electronics is being driven by electrification, energy transition initiatives, industrial automation, and the modernization of power infrastructure. Silicon carbide technologies play a central role in enabling these developments through improved efficiency, performance, and reliability.

By supporting KISAB’s next financing round, Venionaire Capital continues its mission of helping innovative European technology companies secure growth capital, attract strategic partners, and scale internationally.

Investors and strategic partners interested in learning more about KISAB and the upcoming financing opportunity are invited to contact Venionaire Capital directly.

Asia VC: Capital Rotation, Hard-Tech Sovereignty, and the New Cross-Border Playbook

This article offers a focused insight into one of the core mechanisms shaping markets in 2026. The full Market Outlook 2026 provides the broader, integrated context across macro, public markets, private capital and digital assets.

Asia’s VC rebound is not a return to globalised beta. Instead, it reflects a rotation toward ecosystems that can host long-term capital under tighter cross-border conditions.

The rebound is selective, not cyclical

You can see Asia’s venture recovery in the headline figures. However, the composition is more decision-useful. Total Asian VC funding reached USD 73.6bn across 4,308 transactions. Moreover, late-stage and technology-growth rounds carry meaningful weight.

Implication: capital is likely to keep favouring maturity signals. That means later-stage scale-up capacity and fewer, higher-impact bets. It also means less broad-based early-stage risk appetite.

Capital has returned – but only where scale, structure, and exit pathways are already legible.

Geopolitics rewires the investment filter

The report frames 2026 as a period of shifting geopolitical realities. As a result, cross-border strategies recalibrate and investors become more selective.

Implication: underwriting in Asia increasingly shifts from “market size first” to friction management. Therefore, policy credibility and regulatory clarity matter more. Likewise, investors prefer repeatable pathways for capital and exits.

Hard-tech sovereignty replaces platform scaling

The report describes a 2025 reset for China’s VC scene. It also notes a more active government role. In that context, capital flows into strategic “hard tech”. Examples include semiconductors, aerospace, quantum, and advanced AI.

Implication: for China-linked exposure, the question changes. Investors move from “can it scale fast?” to “can it compound inside a sovereignty-first priority set?”. Consequently, timelines can extend and execution matters more.

Japan and Singapore as institutionalisation plays

The report positions Japan as a beneficiary of reform and DeepTech strength. It also points to momentum in automation and robotics.

Implication: Japan can screen as an “institutionalisation” market. Governance, reform, and DeepTech depth can support deployment conditions. Still, the return profile may look less momentum-driven.

The report describes Singapore as a scale-up gateway. It highlights a globally competitive business climate and “regional expansion readiness”.

Implication: Singapore strengthens as a platform for scaling and funding across Asia. In particular, this holds when investors prioritise regulatory clarity and repeatable cross-border setups.

Dual domiciliation becomes a core structuring choice

The report notes a growing number of startups exploring relocation or dual domiciliation. It highlights this dynamic especially for China-linked companies. The stated aim is access to neutral capital markets, hedging political risk, and unlocking international expansion routes.

Implication: domicile becomes part of the investment thesis. Therefore, terms, governance, and exit planning move up the checklist. Investors will also test whether cross-jurisdiction operation adds avoidable financing friction.

In Asia, institutional readiness – not innovation alone – determines where global capital can stay invested.

“Institutional readiness” as the practical filter

The report makes its framing explicit for 2026. It highlights ecosystems that combine regulatory clarity, executional talent, and scalable infrastructure. It also calls out those that “match innovation with institutional readiness”.

Implication: the investable edge shifts from the most innovative companies to the most financeable ecosystems. In other words, capital prefers places where it can deploy, scale, and repatriate with fewer surprises.

The report describes India’s upside as tied to improved regulatory throughput. It also emphasises a specific unlock: simplifying visa, tax, and capital repatriation frameworks. The goal is converting international interest into sustained investment flows.

Implication: India’s opportunity set may expand if friction falls. However, allocations remain sensitive to whether throughput improvements materialise in practice.

What this means for investors in 2026

Asia is less a single VC bucket and more a portfolio of regimes. Accordingly, the report points to rotation toward jurisdictions and hubs that combine policy and regulatory clarity with scale-up infrastructure.

Implication: the winning playbook looks less like rebound chasing and more like structuring for durability. Therefore, investors map geopolitical exposure explicitly. They also build jurisdiction-aware governance. Finally, they plan financing for episodic exit windows rather than smooth reopening.

To explore the full regional frameworks, capital flows, and structural filters shaping Asia and global venture markets in 2026, download the complete Market Outlook 2026 report.

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