StreamElements, an Israeli creator tools startup that provides monetization and production platforms for livestream creators, announced it is in advanced talks with potential buyers as it attempts to avoid a possible collapse, according to statements made on X (formerly Twitter). The company said discussions are positive and plans to share updates soon, following multiple rounds of layoffs in recent years.
StreamElements was founded in 2017 by Or Perry, Doron Nir, Gil Hirsch, and Reem Sherman. The company raised US$100 million in 2021 from investors including SoftBank Vision Fund 2 and PayPal, bringing its total funding to approximately US$111 million.
The search for a buyer came after at least three rounds of layoffs, including a significant cut of more than 35% that eliminated 60 of the company’s 160 jobs.
StreamElements follows a wider trend affecting SoftBank-backed Israeli companies facing severe financial difficulties. Other SoftBank-backed Israeli firms have made comparable cuts, including Cybereason, a cybersecurity company, and RapidAPI, an application programming interface (API) marketplace. Cybereason experienced a similar crisis and lost approximately 90% of its value during the same broader market downturn.
StreamElements exemplifies what industry observers term a “default dead” startup—a company whose cash reserves can be depleted before reaching profitability unless it raises additional funding or implements significant operational changes. Investors and startup advisors typically recommend maintaining 12 to 18 months of cash runway (the time a company can operate before funds are exhausted). Less than six months of runway is widely considered danger territory.
The situation highlights a structural problem for venture-backed startups: investors often pressure teams to spend aggressively on growth, an approach that can rapidly unravel when markets shift or sales targets are missed. A forced sale frequently becomes the last option when cash diminishes and alternatives fade. According to industry data, running out of money is the second most common reason startups fail.
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