Bvmd Amazon Said To Have Interest In Buying Russian eCommerce Player Ozon The U.K. is in the midst of a tech boom, with the number of companies in the technology sector worth at least $10 billion more than doubling in the past six months.Thats according t <a href=https://www.stanley-germany.de>stanley germany</a> o City AM, which lists the FinTech Revolut, online grocery store Ocado and payments platform Checkout among the dozen British companies achieving decacorn status in the first half of 2021. Thats a newer piece of jargon, but one that makes sense. If a billion-dollar company is a unicorn, it makes sense that a $10 billion company gets the preface deca. The surge in new decacorns means the U.K. now boasts 12 of these large companies, putting it in third place globally behind only the U.S. and China, noted the report. It reflects a sharp accelerat <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.fr>gourde stanley</a> ion in growth for British tech firms as a result of the pandemic, as well as new changes in how companies access late-stage investment. The most valuable of these firms is Revolut, at $33 billion following an $800 million funding round run by SoftBank. In second place is Ocado at $20 billion, followed by the online fashion platform Farfetch at $16.7 billion and Checkout at $15 billion.According to City AM, the 12 companies collectively employ nearly 50,000 people and have raised a little under $10 billion since their inception. Investors come from around the world, although the U.S. is the chief source of the funding, making up 54 percent o <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.ro>stanley cup</a> f all financing. Six out of the seven new decacorns come from outside the U.K., the report noted. These new figures Sdkg EIB Enters Marketplace Lending With $147M Funding Circle Deal A new investigation has been launched by Securities and Exchange Commission regulators over whether or not investors are bending the rules when it comes to selling private tech stocks, sources close to the investigation said, The Wall Street Journal reported.Specifically, the investigation is targeting hedge funds and investors to see if shares are being improperly traded. This is at a time when valuations for startups are rising, and there an increase in pre-IPO shares of hot tech companies on the market.This investigation hasn ;t dug deep into the surface yet as its said to be in the early stages, but this most recent probe follows what believed to be an uptick in activity related to those sales of pre-IPO shares while those values skyrocket for companies as theyããremain private.WSJ 8216 ããreport details the SEC probe, which is said to include hedge fund manager Jonathan Sands, who allegedly told other investors he was getting stock directly from <a href=https://www.cups-stanley.fr>gourde stanley</a> Uber. That activity was later halted once his legal team advised him to stop such trading behavior. According to the report, Sands had attempted <a href=https://www.stanleycup.fr>stanley mug</a> to find investors to support a fund that would be used to invest in Uber stock, but he did not actually have access to those shares, sources indicated. In an email with WSJ, Sands denied that he had committed any wrongdoing when it came to selling Uber shares.The SEC is als <a href=https://www.stanleycup.fr>stanley quencher</a> o investigating what roles possible middlemen have played in helping