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SmartyPants

wearesmartypants.com

Stage

Angel | Alive

About SmartyPants

SmartyPants is a developer of children's health-related products. They offer SmartyPants Gummy Multi-Vitamins, a gummy multi-vitamin that the company states contains the most Omega 3 DHA & Vitamin D combined in a gummy multi-vitamin, plus 13 other nutrients. The company states they use eco-friendly materials and source their omega 3's from sustainable small fish sources and so the firm states they do not impact dwindling tuna stocks or expose children to potential heavy metals like mercury that may be found in high concentrations in salmon and tuna.

Headquarters Location

5 Bigelow Street

Somerville, Massachusetts, 02143,

United States

617-625-7514

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Expert Collections containing SmartyPants

Expert Collections are analyst-curated lists that highlight the companies you need to know in the most important technology spaces.

SmartyPants is included in 1 Expert Collection, including Beauty & Personal Care.

B

Beauty & Personal Care

858 items

These startups aim to provide health treatments, diagnosis tools, and products that do not require a prescription or connection with a health professional to enhance personal wellbeing. This includes supplements, women's health maintenance, OTC medicines, and more.

SmartyPants Patents

SmartyPants has filed 1 patent.

patents chart

Application Date

Grant Date

Title

Related Topics

Status

1/6/2017

Dietary supplements, Lactobacillaceae, Digestive system, Bacteriology, Nutrition

Application

Application Date

1/6/2017

Grant Date

Title

Related Topics

Dietary supplements, Lactobacillaceae, Digestive system, Bacteriology, Nutrition

Status

Application

Latest SmartyPants News

Why Hollywood’s Money Machine Is Unscathed by the SVB Failure – for Now

Mar 17, 2023

From a banker’s perspective, Hollywood and Silicon Valley don’t look that different. There are risky projects that require upfront investment and may not pay off for years. There’s a rotating cast of characters with sporadic income who hop frequently from one venture to the next. And there’s a constant boom-and-bust cycle to the business. Most of the banks that specialize in entertainment finance are smaller, regional banks whose stocks have been hammered, like First Republic, which Wall Street rushed to rescue this week after the failures of SVB, a favorite of tech startups, and Signature, a New York bank that catered to crypto firms and Broadway theaters alike. Also Read: First Republic, a San Francisco bank which opened up an entertainment practice in Los Angeles in 2010, has seen its shares gyrate wildly: It dropped 70% since the beginning of the SVB crisis, rose 10% Thursday, then crashed 33% Friday. Other bank stocks have been similarly whipsawed by Wall Street. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., which took SVB and Signature into receivership, has been trying to auction them off. An early attempt failed to find buyers, with a second round of bids due Friday. The entertainment industry has so far avoided becoming collateral damage. But bank runs like the ones that undid Signature and SVB are a “self-fulfilling prophecy,” CFRA equity research analyst Alexander Yokum told TheWrap. “The second you lose [customers’ confidence], you can go down quick.” Making payroll While the producers of documentary short “Stranger at the Gate” spent the past weekend waiting to see if they’d scored an Oscar, their payroll provider, Wrapbook, was worrying about making sure their customers’ collective 100,000 workers — many of them in the entertainment industry — got paid. The tech startup used Silicon Valley Bank to move payroll funds. The bad news: the Smartypants entry lost to “The Elephant Whisperers.” The good news: Just hours before the ceremony got underway, the FDIC announced that it was backing up all of Silicon Valley Bank’s deposits and customers would have access to their money Monday. Also Read: Wrapbook CEO Ali Javid was determined that Smartypants and his other customers would get paid regardless, using his company’s own money to float their direct deposits while SVB was in limbo over the weekend. Some paper checks would have to be reissued, but Javid promised to cover any overdraft fees or other bank charges. “We care about getting people paid and were prepared to absorb the cost to expedite direct deposits and potential overdraft fees,” he said. But as a result of the FDIC’s action, few if any requests came in. Jessica Lessin, CEO of the Information, faced her own financial crisis : The media startup was a customer of Silicon Valley Bank. Even as her reporters were covering it, Lessin wrote an account of her frenzied efforts to make sure the company made payroll over the past week. She moved quickly to set up another bank account — with First Republic, which was soon facing its own challenges. She ended up working with three banks, she wrote in a comment on her own story. Too special for their own good If customers made a mistake in not seeking to diversify their banking arrangements, the troubled banks made a similar error. The failed institutions, explained Gerber Kawasaki CEO Ross Gerber, shared one element: heavy exposure to a particular client group. For Silicon Valley Bank, that was startups, who were cash-rich in 2021, causing the bank’s balances to balloon, but started burning through their deposits in 2022. Signature had tapped into the crypto boom, serving customers in the fast-growing space. That, too, turned to bust, and the failure of another crypto-friendly bank, Silvergate, weighed on others catering to the sector. Also Read: “The banks that went down were specialized,” said Yokum. “It’s unfortunate, but they were less diversified than their competitors.” It’s also worth remembering, though, that representatives of both banks successfully lobbied Congress to change regulations in 2018 , raising the asset level at which they would have to face stress tests from $50 billion to $250 billion. Stress tests, which are “quantitative evaluations” that the Federal Reserve runs on the nation’s biggest banks, are meant to assess whether institutions have enough capital to get through a significant recession. It’s the economy For now, the blink-and-you-missed-it crisis seems to be passing. Thanks to swift action by Wrapbook and other vendors, paychecks kept flowing in Hollywood and on Broadway. “The Fed has stepped in to protect depositors,” said Gerber. For now, the big banks are benefiting the most. Bank of America saw an influx of $15 billion in deposits in recent days, Bloomberg reported, and its peers have seen similar inflows. Also Read: A smaller Hollywood lender that could stand to benefit is City National Bank, the “Bank to the Stars” that famously ponied up the ransom for Frank Sinatra’s kidnapped son. It’s owned by Royal Bank of Canada, a too-big-to-fail institution. Gerber said he expected institutions like City National to see an increase in business. A spokesperson for the bank didn’t respond to a request for comment. Rather than individual bank failures, though, the prospect of an economic downturn driven by or worsened by a banking crisis should rattle Hollywood. The contagion affecting financial markets seemed to sweep from Silicon Valley to Zurich in days, with the Swiss government stepping in to rescue a tottering Credit Suisse, and trading in Treasury bonds seeing unusual disruptions. With the big studios carrying heavy debt loads that they’re hoping to lighten, Hollywood won’t be immune if the financial chaos gets worse. The global crisis of 2007-2009 meant a year-long delay in DreamWorks Pictures’ debt-dependent financing deal with Reliance. And a deep recession could hit the consumer spending that the entertainment industry depends on. The only upside in that scenario? Inspiration for another wave of documentaries explaining just how the markets melted down. Also Read:

SmartyPants Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

  • Where is SmartyPants's headquarters?

    SmartyPants's headquarters is located at 5 Bigelow Street, Somerville.

  • What is SmartyPants's latest funding round?

    SmartyPants's latest funding round is Angel.

  • Who are the investors of SmartyPants?

    Investors of SmartyPants include Jason Calacanis.

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