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Pulse Agri Investments
Roee Tamari co-founded Pulse Agri Investments in 2017 to acquire crop-production platforms and integrate Israeli agtech into operating scale.
Pulse Agri Investments
We invest in leading global companies and incorporate cutting-edge technologies to build world-class agri-businesses.
General information
Firm type
Private Equity
Year founded
2017
AUM
Undisclosed
Location
Region
Middle East
Country
Israel
City
Tel Aviv
Corporate office
10 Karlibach St., Tel Aviv, Israel
Principals
Roee Tamari
Managing Partner
Amnon Eshet
Managing Partner
Oren Mohar
CFO
Vinay Nair
Active Financial Board
Michael Olshan
Active Financial Board
Doron Livnat
Active Financial Board
Tania Ahuja
Active Financial Board
Yishai Fuchs
Active Financial Board
Oded Shoseyov
Advisory Board
Doron Gal
Advisory Board
Idan Sides
Advisory Board
Udi Zur
Advisory Board
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
How does Pulse Agri Investments source and structure its deals?
Pulse acquires controlling stakes in revenue-generating crop-production companies as platforms, then licenses, partners with, or acquires complementary technology firms. This buyout-and-integrate approach differs from venture-stage agtech investing by requiring that each platform already has existing market presence and cash flow. The firm has not publicly described its proprietary sourcing channels or the typical size of its acquisitions.
What is Roee Tamari's professional background before Pulse?
Roee Tamari served as CEO of Herodium Investments, a publicly traded agro-pharmaceutical company on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange, where an M&A-led strategy increased the firm's valuation over 16x. He co-founded Granit Energy, a developer of bio-energy projects that produce electricity from agricultural waste. Tamari holds a law degree, trained at Israel's Supreme Court, and practiced project-finance law before moving into operating and investment roles.
Does Pulse operate as a family office or a traditional private equity fund?
Pulse Agri Investments is structured as an asset manager pursuing a buyout private equity strategy, not a single-family office. The firm does not publicly disclose its fund structure or whether it raises blind-pool capital from third-party limited partners. Its website frames the organization as a team of agricultural operators executing platform acquisitions with co-investment from its active financial board.
Which geographic markets does Pulse target?
Pulse is headquartered in Tel Aviv and operates globally in crop production, reflecting Israel's role as a top-five geography for agtech investment identified by AgFunder in 2017. The firm aims to bridge Israeli agriculture technology with production-scale farming operations worldwide, though it has not published a list of specific country exposures or operating-company locations.
How does Pulse differentiate its investment strategy from venture capital?
Instead of making minority investments in early-stage agtech startups, Pulse buys established revenue-generating crop-production platforms and later adds technology through partnerships, licensing, or acquisitions. The firm's thesis is that scaling agtech requires an existing operational channel and deep value-chain understanding — capabilities it builds inside the acquired platforms rather than betting on startups independently reaching commercialization.
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