Miami Venture Capital
A gateway ecosystem in formation
Capital, culture, and technology converging across the Americas.
Ecosystem Intelligence
Structural characteristics and sector analysis
Ecosystem Profile
AI, fintech & climate technology
Early-stage acceleration (seed–Series B)
Rapidly maturing (21 unicorns)
Americas-wide from inception
Accelerating rapidly
Early-stage, developing
Migrating founders & Latin American talent
Cross-regional, early-stage
Sector Strength Analysis
Venture capital allocation by sector (Miami vs. Global). Data indexed for illustration.
Why Miami
What distinguishes this ecosystem
Gateway positioning across regions
Miami functions as a connective hub linking North America, Latin America, and international capital flows. This role supports companies operating across borders, particularly in fintech, crypto, and emerging-market-oriented platforms.
Capital inflow ahead of infrastructure maturity
The ecosystem is characterized by accelerating capital interest relative to its current operational depth. This imbalance creates both risk and opportunity, favoring investors willing to engage during formation rather than after stabilization.
Optionality over specialization
Miami does not yet exhibit narrow sector dominance. Instead, its value lies in flexibility, geographic reach, and early participation in ecosystem shaping.
Portfolio Construction
How the fund operates
Multi-manager diversification within Miami
The fund invests across 20–25 venture capital managers operating in the Miami ecosystem. This provides exposure to hundreds of underlying companies while reducing dependency on any single manager's performance or selection capability.
Vintage-aware allocation strategy
Capital is deployed across multiple investment years to capture different market cycles and valuation environments. This vintage diversification reduces exposure to any single period's pricing dynamics.
Governance and oversight
The Investment Committee conducts systematic due diligence on manager selection, monitors portfolio composition, and maintains ongoing communication with underlying funds. Quarterly reporting provides transparency into developments.
Track Record
Notable exits from this ecosystem
Chewy
Ultimate Software
Technisys
Cyxtera
Oasis
Sunergy
Examples shown reflect historical outcomes within the ecosystem and are not investments made by Esinli funds. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
Ecosystem Context
Funds active in this ecosystem
Softbank Latin America Fund
Kaszek Ventures
Greycroft
Atomic
Rokk3r
H.I.G. Capital
Alliance Capital
Fuel Venture Capital
Krillion Ventures
500 Startups Miami
Venture Hive
LAB Miami
Funds listed are provided for ecosystem context only. Esinli does not commit to investing in any specific manager. Actual allocations are determined by the Investment Committee based on fund availability, terms, and portfolio construction objectives.
Investor Considerations
Frequently asked questions
What is the minimum investment?
The minimum investment in the Miami Ecosystem Fund is $100,000. Investors may allocate to multiple ecosystem funds to construct a diversified portfolio.
What is the expected holding period?
Venture capital fund-of-funds typically have 10–12 year fund lifecycles, with distributions occurring as underlying portfolio companies achieve liquidity events. This is a long-term investment structure designed to capture full innovation cycles.
Am I locked in until fund termination?
Investors are not strictly locked in until fund termination. While this is a long-term venture investment, investors may seek liquidity through a third-party secondary provider that Esinli has partnered with. Availability, pricing, and timing depend on market conditions and are not guaranteed.
How does geographic concentration affect risk?
Single-ecosystem focus creates intentional geographic exposure rather than accidental concentration. Within the ecosystem, diversification across 20–25 managers and hundreds of companies reduces single-manager and single-company risk. Investors seeking broader geographic diversification can allocate to multiple ecosystem funds.
What are the fees?
Fee structure follows fund-of-funds conventions: management fees cover Investment Committee oversight, due diligence, and ongoing portfolio management. Detailed fee disclosure is provided in offering materials. We maintain transparency on both direct fees and underlying fund fees.
Questions about this fund?
Schedule a conversation to discuss the Miami ecosystem, portfolio construction, and how this fund fits within a broader allocation strategy.