• Contact
Thursday, April 2, 2026
  • Login
Oklahoma Business Voice
  • Home
  • News
    • All
    • Aerospace
    • Childcare
    • Education
    • Energy & Environment
    • Federal
    • Film & Television Industry
    • Finance
    • Health Care
    • Innovation
    • Issues Affecting Oklahomans
    • OBV One-on-One
    • Opinion
    • Politics & Elections
    • Taxes & Budget
    • Tech
    • Tribal
    • Workforce Development
    Board of Equalization Certifies FY 2027 Revenue Estimate, Recurring Revenue Up $338M

    Stitt, GOP leaders announce budget deal after April Fool’s opener

    From the Editor: Serious work, real results

    From the Editor: Serious work, real results

    Chamber Day, Taco Tuesday draw local leaders to Capitol

    Chamber Day, Taco Tuesday draw local leaders to Capitol

    Aerospace Week spotlights growth as HB 4392 advances pilot sites for advanced air mobility

    Aerospace Week spotlights growth as HB 4392 advances pilot sites for advanced air mobility

  • Sign UpNEW
  • About
  • Contact
  • Advertise With Us!
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • All
    • Aerospace
    • Childcare
    • Education
    • Energy & Environment
    • Federal
    • Film & Television Industry
    • Finance
    • Health Care
    • Innovation
    • Issues Affecting Oklahomans
    • OBV One-on-One
    • Opinion
    • Politics & Elections
    • Taxes & Budget
    • Tech
    • Tribal
    • Workforce Development
    Board of Equalization Certifies FY 2027 Revenue Estimate, Recurring Revenue Up $338M

    Stitt, GOP leaders announce budget deal after April Fool’s opener

    From the Editor: Serious work, real results

    From the Editor: Serious work, real results

    Chamber Day, Taco Tuesday draw local leaders to Capitol

    Chamber Day, Taco Tuesday draw local leaders to Capitol

    Aerospace Week spotlights growth as HB 4392 advances pilot sites for advanced air mobility

    Aerospace Week spotlights growth as HB 4392 advances pilot sites for advanced air mobility

  • Sign UpNEW
  • About
  • Contact
  • Advertise With Us!
No Result
View All Result
Oklahoma Business Voice
No Result
View All Result
Home News
Cortado Ventures stands up $10M angel fund to keep Oklahoma’s builders building

Cortado Ventures stands up $10M angel fund to keep Oklahoma’s builders building

Luke Reynolds by Luke Reynolds
February 19, 2026
in News
Reading Time: 5 mins read
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

OKLAHOMA CITY (OBV) — Cortado Ventures has launched a $10 million angel fund targeted to Oklahoma‑based startups, positioning it as catalytic, first‑check capital for founders across the state’s technology economy.

The firm’s message is unambiguous: even as some energy headquarters head south, Oklahoma talent can stay and build the next generation of companies here.

“The idea that there’s still a gap at the earliest stages of financing for Oklahoma companies has been ruminating with us for awhile,” said Susan Moring, general partner at Cortado. “While headquarters may move, the talent that built this city does not have to.”

The idea that there’s still a gap at the earliest stages of financing for Oklahoma companies has been ruminating with us for awhile. While headquarters may move, the talent that built this city does not have to.

– Susan Moring, general partner at Cortado

The move follows two headline developments in Oklahoma City’s legacy energy sector. Devon Energy announced a $58 billion all‑stock merger with Coterra Energy with the combined company headquartered in Houston while keeping a significant presence in Oklahoma City. Days later, Expand Energy said it will relocate its corporate headquarters to Houston by mid‑2026, keeping Oklahoma City as a major operations hub. State business leaders framed both decisions as reminders of interstate competition—and a call to accelerate advanced‑industry growth in Oklahoma.

Moring said Cortado’s angel fund is designed precisely for that moment. The vehicle will write earlier, smaller checks than the firm’s core funds and accept a broader range of business types, including some that are too early or not yet a fit for the firm’s B2B‑focused venture funds.

“In our world, an ‘angel’ financing comes in even earlier than a typical venture fund would,” Moring said. “We want to catch startups really early—even before revenue or customers—so more ideas get a chance to take root here.”

A platform that’s matured and a call to build

Cortado launched in 2020 and has raised two core funds to date: a $20 million Fund I (2021) and an $80 million Fund II (2023) with a growing MidCon regional thesis (Oklahoma, Dallas, Houston, Northwest Arkansas, Denver).

The firm is continuing its Oklahoma‑anchored but regional strategy via its next core fund, and is separately working on a dedicated frontier technologies strategy.

The new angel fund narrows in geographically while broadening sector aperture. The focus is software and the physical economy including automation, advanced manufacturing, AI, energy‑transition technologies, aerospace and defense, and related industrial solutions.

Cortado’s B2B bias still informs the approach—software that scales remains attractive—but the angel fund is intentionally flexible on category and stage.

Moring emphasized job quality and talent retention as core outcomes.

“Across the board, these companies generate high‑paying roles—engineers, product managers, data scientists,” she said. “We have founders here building in energy tech and industrial software. We also have companies hiring chemical and mechanical engineers in hydrogen and other climate‑oriented areas. There’s real demand—and an opening to keep that talent in Oklahoma.”

Why Oklahoma and why now

Founders, Moring said, benefit from Oklahoma’s “small big city” dynamics: short paths to customers, mentors, and decision‑makers; and a lower burn rate.

“In startups, how you fail is you run out of cash before you hit the next milestone,” she said. “Here, a dollar goes further. It’s not about ‘cheap labor,’ it’s about efficient build cycles and access. You’re one degree of separation from the industry leader you need to meet.”

That connectivity is increasingly visible at The Verge OKC, the nonprofit platform built with support from Flourish OKC, Inasmuch Foundation, and Cortado.

The Verge provides workspace, programming and a “no‑wrong‑door” intake into mentors, resources and capital. Moring pointed to companies that started as single‑founder tenants and grew out of the space as evidence of a maturing pipeline.

“I can walk you around two floors and introduce you to 10 tech entrepreneurs actively building,” Moring said. “Some are $10–$25 million companies today; the point is they’re on the path. And they’re here.”

Risk, portfolio logic, and the Oklahoma thesis

Angel‑stage investing carries risk by design.

“Out of every 10 companies, five or six won’t work,” Moring said. “Two or three are base hits. You’re aiming for one big winner to make the fund. The answer is portfolio diversification across sectors within our software‑plus‑industry lane, and across stages.”

Even so, Moring argues the reward profile is compelling for Oklahoma.

“If we back more founders earlier, we increase the number of shots on goal,” she said. “The north star is outcomes that look like a Paycom‑scale employer. Maybe not identical, but hundreds to thousands of high‑wage jobs, long‑term community investment, and a durable innovation culture.”

How to engage

Cortado has opened a formal application on its website for founders interested in the angel fund. Moring noted surging inbound interest since the announcement—“a lot of LinkedIn messages,” she said—but underscored that the website intake is the right path to be evaluated consistently.

“We’ve been ruminating on this a while,” she added. “The recent HQ news made it clear. This is the right time to move.”

Cortado’s new angel fund wagers that Oklahoma’s engineers and operators will build here and that early, patient capital can tilt the odds.

ShareTweetShare
Previous Post

OG&E commissions new power plant to bolster Tinker AFB resiliency, regional growth

Next Post

Google offers free AI certificate to Oklahoma small businesses

Related Posts

Board of Equalization Certifies FY 2027 Revenue Estimate, Recurring Revenue Up $338M
Breaking News

Stitt, GOP leaders announce budget deal after April Fool’s opener

April 1, 2026
From the Editor: Serious work, real results
Aerospace

From the Editor: Serious work, real results

April 1, 2026
Chamber Day, Taco Tuesday draw local leaders to Capitol
News

Chamber Day, Taco Tuesday draw local leaders to Capitol

April 1, 2026
Aerospace Week spotlights growth as HB 4392 advances pilot sites for advanced air mobility
Aerospace

Aerospace Week spotlights growth as HB 4392 advances pilot sites for advanced air mobility

March 31, 2026
Paxton unanimously tapped as pro tem‑designate
News

Paxton unanimously tapped as pro tem‑designate

March 30, 2026
Aerospace Week takes flight Across Oklahoma
Aerospace

Aerospace Week takes flight Across Oklahoma

March 30, 2026
Next Post
Google offers free AI certificate to Oklahoma small businesses

Google offers free AI certificate to Oklahoma small businesses

Oklahoma Business Voice

© 2026 Oklahoma State Chamber.
Powered by High Five Media.
Privacy Policy

Navigate Site

  • Home
  • News
  • Sign Up
  • About
  • Contact
  • Advertise With Us!

Follow Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Sign Up
  • About
  • Contact
  • Advertise With Us!

© 2026 Oklahoma State Chamber.
Powered by High Five Media.
Privacy Policy

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.