Inside the Investor Decks: How Fiction Became Funding

Inside the Investor Decks: How Fiction Became Funding

Huboo Technologies Limited raised over £118 million in equity and £20 million in secured debt before collapsing into administration in late 2024. But anyone reading their investor pitch decks would have thought they were the next billion-pound logistics unicorn.

This post examines how pitch decks and marketing language were used to paint a picture far removed from financial reality — and why so many seasoned investors still bought in.

1. The Language of Hype

Startup pitch decks are built around vision — and Huboo’s was no exception. Phrases like:

These buzzwords were peppered throughout Huboo’s marketing materials, feeding into a narrative of innovation and inevitability.

But underneath the surface, the numbers told a much darker story.

2. The Truth Beneath the Surface

Here’s what investors missed (or ignored):

This wasn’t a fast-growing tech business. It was a cash bonfire. And yet, valuation rounds continued to climb.

3. The “Tech Company” Myth

At its core, Huboo was a logistics business with some basic platform features. It was not a true SaaS product, nor was it AI-driven or deeply automated.

But in investor decks, the tech angle was pushed hard. By calling itself a tech company rather than a warehousing provider, Huboo achieved:

4. The Investors Who Bought the Hype

Major institutional investors, including large VC funds, supported Huboo through multiple funding rounds. Were they misled — or complicit?

There’s a case to be made that the illusion was so well-constructed that even seasoned investors were fooled. But there’s also evidence that warning signs were ignored for the sake of chasing another Deliveroo-style exit.

5. The Cost of Belief

Ultimately, Huboo’s investors lost tens of millions. More critically, the funding helped prop up a failing company long past its natural lifespan — allowing it to continue trading, onboarding clients, and digging a deeper financial hole.

And in the end, the administrators were left with a shell company and a pile of debt.

6. Accountability and Transparency

There are calls for greater transparency in startup reporting, including:

Because without proper due diligence and public visibility, the next Huboo is already on the way.

Conclusion: Words Are Cheap, Losses Are Not

The story of Huboo is not just about mismanagement. It’s about the seductive power of hype — and the financial wreckage that follows when vision overtakes reality.

Next: The Real Faces of Baaj Capital — Reputation vs. Reality


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Check out the latest BBC article on Huboo HERE

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