In the early days of Teramount, investors kept asking CEO Hesham Taha the same question.
He had a platform that could connect chip to chip using light instead of electrons, considered a technical feat he and co-founder Avi Israel had spent years developing. But the problem, he recalled, was everything else.
“We thought it was a great idea, see how easy we can connect the light to the chip. Everyone will use that,” Taha said. “But it turns out to be exactly the opposite in the first few years after our inception.”
The problem for Taha and Israel was that for nearly a decade, Teramount was trying to solve a problem the semiconductor industry didn't know it would have. The market didn’t yet exist, nor did the supply chain. “The most critical point and the big barrier at the beginning of this journey was, ‘What is the product? What is the use case?’ This is what every investor kept asking us, and we failed to give a good answer.”
Years passed, and that question, once unanswerable, just got answered. In April, Molex announced the acquisition of Teramount for approximately $430 million, roughly 7-8 times the $58 million that the Jerusalem-based startup had raised across its lifetime.
The exit is a case study in what might be called ‘The Patience Trade’: bet on a technology before the world knows it needs it, endure years of uncertainty, and trust that the market eventually catches up. In Teramount’s case, it took two pivots, one global AI infrastructure boom, and a seed investor willing to see something others couldn’t: Lior Handelsman.
Today, Handelsman is a Managing Partner at Grove Ventures, and before that, was a co-founder of SolarEdge - so he himself is no stranger to building technologies into markets that don’t yet exist. When he first encountered Teramount, his instinct was to pass. “There was no market even when I met them at the beginning of 2021,” he said. “And I was pretty much willing to tell them, ‘Look, guys, very nice, but I can’t see the market’.”
Handelsman ended up reaching out to senior contacts at NVIDIA, Broadcom, Cisco, and Intel — companies that would eventually need exactly what Teramount was building. “When I told them, they said, ‘That’s a big problem. Connecting fiber to chip? That’s a big problem. We are all going to need that in four to five years’.”
Grove led the seed round in 2021, and the next few years compressed faster than anyone predicted. The 2022 generative AI explosion turbocharged demand for the kind of optical connectivity Teramount had spent years perfecting. Co-packaged optics — the integration of optical engines directly with compute chips to reduce power consumption and latency — moved from a niche conference topic to an urgent industry priority.
And so Teramount, having spent years building the ecosystem relationships and supply chain partnerships that most competitors hadn’t started, was suddenly indispensable.
Taha points to two moments that changed Teramount’s trajectory. The first was 2017, when co-packaged optics began to emerge as a defined technology category. The second was 2024, when AI infrastructure demand made optical connectivity not just desirable but necessary. “This was the major and significant pivot in our journey,” he said.
Strategic investors followed the technical validation. AMD, Samsung, and Hitachi all joined Teramount as the company’s direction became increasingly legible to the industry. Handelsman describes the combination of financial investors alongside strategic ones as the signal that a company has crossed a critical threshold: “That’s like a sweet spot. A financial investor is leading the round, saying that there is still upside, and strategic investors, who can all be customers.”
For Taha, the Molex acquisition was less a finish line than a pragmatic decision about speed. “We had a great technology, we have a great product, but we need to move fast to match the market speed,” he concluded. Molex, a proven interconnect manufacturer with global production capabilities, offered the industrial scale that the Jerusalem-based startup could not self-assemble quickly enough.
The patience trade paid off. The lesson it offers is about endurance, and about finding investors willing to hold the same long view as the founders they back.











