Israeli Cyber Startup Torq Hits $1.2B Valuation with $140M Raise

Torq has rocketed to unicorn status with a $140 million Series C round. The Tel Aviv-based firm now values at $1.2 billion, fueled by demand for its agentless security orchestration platform. Investors including Insight Partners see hyperautomation reshaping enterprise defenses.

Founded in 2019, Torq eliminates manual alert fatigue. No-code workflows let SOC teams build plays in minutes, integrating hundreds of tools without engineers. Enterprises cut response times from hours to seconds across cloud, endpoints, and networks.

This raise doubles down on US expansion. New York headquarters serve Fortune 500 clients facing ransomware surges. CEO Ory Segal highlighted autonomous operations as the future, where AI handles 80% of incidents autonomously.

Israel’s cyber ecosystem powers the ascent. Unit 8200 alumni staff Torq, drawing from real-world ops against nation-states. Export controls ease as Trump policies favor allies, unlocking Pentagon deals.

Funding splits between product and go-to-market. R&D targets GenAI threats, simulating attacks on LLMs. Sales teams triple in Austin and London, chasing $100 billion serviceable markets.

Competitors like Swimlane watch closely. Torq’s marketplace boasts 200 plugins, fostering ecosystems. Customers report 70% staff efficiency gains, justifying premium pricing.

Regional peers benefit indirectly. UAE and Saudi firms license Torq for sovereign clouds, blending Israeli innovation with Gulf scale. Joint ventures emerge, defying geopolitics through tech pragmatism.

Talent wars rage in Tel Aviv. Engineers command $500K packages, but equity vests keep stars aboard. Universities pump graduates, sustaining 10% global cyber market share from 0.1% population.

Challenges include scaling support. Hypergrowth strains service levels, but automation ironically aids. IPO whispers grow louder, with Nasdaq filings eyed for 2027.

Investors diversify risks. Insight led prior rounds, now joined by Georgian and Grove Ventures. Returns mirror Palo Alto Networks’ path, blending software with services.

End-users transform operations. CISOs sleep better as platforms predict breaches via behavioral baselines. SMBs access enterprise power through light editions.

Broader Middle East gains. Cyber exports hit $12 billion yearly, funding startups like Torq. Gulf sovereigns co-invest, building regional resilience against shared threats. Torq exemplifies Israeli grit. From garage to global force, no-code security proves simplicity wins wars. Unicorn status marks maturity, with billions in value creation ahead.

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Paul Carvouni, CEO
Salesforce

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