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Quantum clocks to gut bugs: seven ANZ startups open June with $17m raised

Sasha Cole by Sasha Cole
July 12, 2026
in Funding
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Seven Australian and New Zealand startups opened June by banking a combined $17 million in fresh capital, led by Adelaide quantum-sensing firm QuantX Labs, which pulled in $7 million to scale a technology already flying on a SpaceX mission and running inside Australia’s defence systems.

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The tally, compiled by Startup Daily and echoed by SmartCompany, spans quantum clocks, synthetic data for artificial intelligence, battery-sniffing robots, gut microbiome probiotics and an AI-native email platform.

It is a spread that captures where early-stage money is moving in 2026: toward deep technology with a defence or infrastructure edge, and toward software that helps companies feed sensitive data into AI without breaching privacy rules.

Deep tech leads the cheques

QuantX Labs took the largest single raise. The South Australian company builds optical atomic clocks that its founders say are 10 to 100 times more stable than existing systems, while remaining smaller and more portable.

The seed round, worth US$5 million, was led by global investment firm Serendipity Capital, whose co-founder Anton Jerga joins the QuantX board. Chief executive and co-founder Andre Luiten said Serendipity “brings exactly the kind of partnership we were seeking,” in comments reported by Australian Defence Magazine.

Precision timing underpins navigation, telecommunications and critical infrastructure, which is why the round carries strategic weight. QuantX has already sold timing systems to the Australian Department of Defence and deployed its clock technology on a SpaceX flight, all before raising external equity.

Serendipity chief executive Rob Jesudason framed the appeal plainly, telling Australian Defence Magazine that “modern defence systems, telecommunications networks and critical infrastructure all depend on precise timing.”

Second on the list was DataMasque, which raised $5.6 million in a growth round led by Wavemaker Partners, with existing backers OIF Ventures and Icehouse Ventures returning. The company de-identifies sensitive records, generating synthetic data that preserves relationships and values so organisations can train AI models without exposing personal information.

DataMasque told SmartCompany it has grown annual recurring revenue six-fold and tripled its headcount since a $2.3 million seed round in 2023. Alongside the raise, it launched a capability to mask unstructured data such as call transcripts, emails and logs.

Robots, apparel and probiotics

Sydney’s Oscorp Energy raised $1.3 million in a pre-seed round led by the Atlas AI VB fund, with Antler and Antipodean Capital joining. The company builds AI-powered robotics that detect and pull lithium-ion batteries from waste and recycling streams, working with ASX-listed battery recycler Livium.

The problem is concrete: SmartCompany noted the Australian Council of Recycling estimates 10,000 to 12,000 battery-related fires in waste streams each year.

Also in Sydney, sports-apparel platform Nardo secured $1 million in pre-seed capital, with former Socceroo Tim Cahill investing and signing on as a strategic partner. Co-founder Beau Catley told the roundup the platform replaces more than 130 manual touchpoints in kit ordering with a single workflow, adding: “The issue was never just the product; it was the entire operating model.”

Three startups each collected roughly $700,000. Brisbane construction-compliance software firm Alloovium and Queensland probiotics startup Gutgutgoose both won selection funding into Y Combinator, while Adelaide’s Nitrosend, an AI-native email marketing platform, raised a seed round led by Eastend Ventures Fund 1 with Archangel Ventures and Aussie Angels.

Nitrosend is the second act for siblings Edward and George Hartley, whose earlier venture SmartrMail sent six billion emails before its 2022 acquisition by Relay Commerce.

Why it matters

The batch lands at a telling moment for Australian venture capital. According to Tracxn’s Q1 2026 report, deal counts fell 9 per cent year-on-year, yet total funding held near $763 million as investors wrote fewer, larger cheques with greater conviction.

The standout theme has been deep tech with dual civilian and defence uses. Gilmour Space and Advanced Navigation alone accounted for close to a third of Q1 funding, and aerospace, maritime and defence tech drew $145 million in the quarter, up from just $3.1 million a year earlier.

QuantX fits that pattern squarely. Its raise is small in dollar terms but strategically outsized, feeding a sovereign capability in precise timing that AUKUS-era planners increasingly treat as a national security asset rather than a laboratory curiosity.

The wider picture is less rosy for founders in hard science. Innovation body FBI notes that Australian venture capital still favours software with fast revenue, leaving deep tech companies struggling to raise later-stage capital before commercial validation. Government co-investment through the National Reconstruction Fund has become a genuine force filling that gap.

For jobs and skills, the mix matters. DataMasque’s headcount trebling shows how privacy-safe AI tooling is now a hiring engine, while QuantX and Oscorp point to advanced-manufacturing and recycling roles that keep sovereign expertise onshore.

The forward look

Expect the conviction-over-volume trend to continue through the second half of 2026. Investors are concentrating capital in companies with defence pull, real revenue or accelerator validation, rather than spraying seed cheques across a crowded field.

The three Y Combinator picks signal a familiar pull northward, with Alloovium already relocating to San Francisco. Whether founders such as Nitrosend’s Hartley brothers can scale from Adelaide without decamping offshore will test how deep Australia’s local capital and talent pools have grown.

QuantX, meanwhile, plans to scale manufacturing and expand international distribution, a reminder that the most consequential raise of the week was also the one with the longest runway.

Sources: Startup Daily, SmartCompany, SmartCompany (DataMasque), Australian Defence Magazine, Tracxn Q1 2026 report, FBI.

Tags: artificial intelligenceAustralian startupsDataMasquedeep techquantum technologyQuantX Labsstartup fundingventure capital
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Sasha Cole

Sasha Cole

Sasha covers Australian AI startups, venture funding and founder stories for FluentSea.

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