Cascadia Capital Expands Into Tech M&A With New Silicon Valley Office

Cascadia Capital, a U.S.-based boutique investment bank, is making a strategic push into technology mergers and acquisitions (M&A) with the opening of a new Silicon Valley office and the appointment of veteran banker Jonathan Cantwell to lead its new technology group, company executives told Reuters.

NEW LEADERSHIP AND STRATEGIC FOCUS

Cantwell, previously partner and head of software investment banking at GP Bullhound, will oversee the firm’s technology advisory practice, focusing on enterprise Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) and artificial intelligence (AI) companies.

He will lead recruitment for the new office and aims to build a 20-member team specializing in advising growth-stage technology firms with enterprise values of up to $2 billion.
Cascadia plans to leverage Cantwell’s strong M&A track record, which includes PeakAI’s sale to UiPath (PATH.N) and Compendium’s sale to Oracle (ORCL.N).

“We’re at this inflection point where many high-growth software and AI companies will need experienced advisors,” Cantwell said. “It’s the right moment to build a new practice focused on enterprise automation, data analytics, and digital applications.”

INVESTMENT BACKING AND GROWTH PLANS

Cascadia’s expansion is supported by Atlas Merchant Group, led by former Barclays CEO Bob Diamond, which made an eight-figure investment in Cascadia in 2022 to fuel its growth.
Diamond highlighted that the move aligns with the convergence between digital assets, traditional finance, and the increasing dominance of AI-driven innovation in financial markets.

“You have the importance of software, the importance of AI, and the merging of traditional finance with digital technologies,” Diamond said. “It couldn’t be a better time to enter the tech M&A space.”

EXPANDING BEYOND CORE SECTORS

Cascadia Capital, led by CEO Michael Butler, a former Morgan Stanley executive, already operates successful M&A practices in consumer goods, food and agribusiness, industrials, and business services.
With its new Silicon Valley hub, the firm aims to position itself as a go-to advisor for mid-market software and AI companies, helping them navigate consolidation, fundraising, and acquisition opportunities amid a surge in sectoral deal activity.

As global demand for AI-driven enterprise software and automation technologies accelerates, Cascadia’s new practice underscores a broader trend of boutique advisory firms pivoting toward high-value, data-centric industries.

Alibaba’s Amap Hits Record 360 Million Users on First Day of China’s Extended Holiday

Alibaba Group’s mapping app Amap reached an all-time record of over 360 million daily active users on the first day of China’s eight-day National Day holiday, the company announced on Wednesday.

The surge highlights Amap’s growing dominance in the travel and lifestyle app ecosystem and marks a significant milestone in its ongoing rivalry with Meituan, another major player in China’s digital services market.

AMAP’S STRATEGIC SHIFT AND AI FEATURES

Traditionally known for navigation, Amap has been expanding into lifestyle and local services, directly challenging Meituan’s Dazhong Dianping platform. It now offers AI-powered rankings of restaurants, hotels and tourist destinations through its new feature called “Street Stars”, which leverages artificial intelligence algorithms to generate destination lists for users.

As part of the launch campaign, Amap rolled out 1 billion yuan ($140.43 million) worth of subsidies, including ride-hailing discounts and in-store coupons, to boost engagement during the peak holiday period.

MARKET REACTION AND HOLIDAY BOOST

The announcement sent Alibaba’s shares up 4% in Hong Kong trading on Thursday after JPMorgan raised its price target on the stock to HK$240 ($30.85) from HK$165, citing stronger-than-expected user activity and positive outlooks in the company’s digital services ecosystem.

The record usage coincided with China’s National Day and Mid-Autumn Festival, which this year were combined into an eight-day “super holiday”, one of the country’s busiest travel periods.

According to state broadcaster CCTV, China’s national railway handled 23.13 million passenger trips on the first day alone — an 8% increase year-on-year and a new single-day record, underscoring the nationwide travel boom.

ALIBABA VS. MEITUAN: A DIGITAL LIFESTYLE BATTLE

Amap’s evolution reflects Alibaba’s broader effort to capture local-lifestyle market share from Meituan by transforming a simple mapping tool into a comprehensive travel and experience platform.
Chinese consumers, who traditionally turned to Meituan’s Dazhong Dianping for restaurant reviews and bookings, are increasingly finding similar services integrated directly within Amap’s app — backed by AI personalization and user subsidies.

As China’s consumer and tourism sectors rebound post-pandemic, the battle for digital lifestyle dominance between Alibaba and Meituan is set to intensify — with Amap’s record user engagement during the National Day holiday offering Alibaba a strong start.

Citi Raises Ether Forecast, Trims Bitcoin Outlook as Investor Preferences Shift

Citigroup has revised its year-end cryptocurrency forecasts, raising its target for ether (ETH) while slightly cutting its outlook for bitcoin (BTC), citing changing investor behaviour and macroeconomic headwinds.

The Wall Street bank said that investors are increasingly gravitating toward ether’s yield-generating features, while bitcoin continues to rely primarily on price appreciation for returns.

NEW TARGETS AND PRICE OUTLOOK

Citi set a year-end target of $133,000 for bitcoin, representing a 12% upside from its current trading price of around $118,747, as of 05:30 GMT.
For ether, the bank now expects the token to reach $4,500 by year-end — a 3% gain from its current level of $4,375.

The brokerage maintains a positive long-term view, forecasting 12-month targets of $181,000 for bitcoin and $5,440 for ether.

BITCOIN: STRONG NARRATIVE, MIXED MACRO HEADWINDS

Citi slightly reduced its bitcoin forecast due to offsetting macroeconomic factors, including a stronger U.S. dollar and weaker gold prices, which tend to reduce demand for alternative stores of value.
Still, analysts said bitcoin’s “digital gold” narrative remains robust, continuing to attract institutional and retail inflows as global interest in hard assets persists.

Citi’s base case assumes year-end inflows of roughly $7.5 billion into bitcoin, while its bull case depends on rising equity markets and stronger demand from digital asset funds.
Under its bear case, however, the bank warned that a global recession could push bitcoin prices down to $83,000.

ETHER: INSTITUTIONAL INTEREST AND STAKING GAINS

Ether’s upgraded outlook comes after a sharp summer price rally, fueled by institutional buying and ETF-related inflows. Citi analysts said ether’s potential for yield generation through staking and decentralised finance (DeFi) continues to attract capital from long-term investors.

Citi expects ether to remain supported in 2025 by strong inflows from ETFs and digital asset treasuries, which have emerged as a growing segment of crypto demand.
While ether’s downside is harder to quantify, given uncertainties around network usage and value accrual, analysts said the token benefits from a broader use case compared with bitcoin.

INVESTOR FLOWS WILL DRIVE YEAR-END PERFORMANCE

Both cryptocurrencies, Citi noted, are trading above user-activity-based metrics, highlighting the speculative component of current valuations. Sustained investor demand and macro stability will be essential to keeping prices elevated into 2026.

“Ether’s yield advantage and utility-driven narrative are drawing steady inflows,” Citi wrote, “while bitcoin continues to hold its place as digital gold — but faces short-term macro friction.”