
DÔEN Raises Series A Round to Support Global Expansion
The brand, founded by California-born sisters Margaret and Katherine Kleveland, launched in 2016 as a digitally native fashion brand. Its first collection offered women's dresses, knits and tops, footwear and children's wear. Since then, it has evolved into a full lifestyle brand, having introduced categories including outerwear, denim, swim, tees, sleep & loungewear, delicates and a home capsule. DÔEN currently operates seven brick-and-mortar locations, including recent openings in Marin and Nantucket, Mass.
'This has been a long time in the making, as our top priority was finding a partner who aligns with our values and long-term vision for growing DÔEN,' said Margaret Kleveland, co-founder and chief executive of DÔEN, in a statement. 'Silas Capital has a strong track record of supporting authentic, organic community building and helping their portfolio companies scale in thoughtful, sustainable ways.'
The funding round represents a key milestone in the company's continued growth and global expansion. The company was advised by Beverly Hills-based Ervin Cohen & Jessup LLP on the funding round.
'It has been a distinct privilege to advise DÔEN – a woman-founded and women-led company – since its early days,' said Vanja Habekovic, Ervin Cohen & Jessup partner, who led the deal team.
Information for this article was sourced from DÔEN.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
36 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Ethernet is Winning the War Against InfiniBand in AI Back-End Networks, According to Dell'Oro Group
$80 B in Ethernet Switch Spending Up for Grabs Over Next Five Years REDWOOD CITY, Calif. , July 15, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- According to the recently published AI Networks for AI Workloads report by Dell'Oro Group, the trusted source for market information about the telecommunications, security, networks, and data center industries, Ethernet is winning the war against InfiniBand in AI back-end networks, potentially driving nearly $80 B in data center switch sales over the next five years. "When we first initiated our coverage of AI Back-end Networks in late 2023, the market was dominated by InfiniBand, holding over 80 percent share," said Sameh Boujelbene, Vice President at Dell'Oro Group. "Despite its dominance, we have consistently predicted that Ethernet would ultimately prevail at scale. What is notable, however, is the rapid pace at which Ethernet gained ground in AI back-end networks. As the industry moves to 800 Gbps and beyond, we believe Ethernet is now firmly positioned to overtake InfiniBand in these high-performance deployments. "Although Ethernet is gaining ground in AI back-end networks, a key question remains: how much of the Ethernet opportunity will be captured by NVIDIA versus other switch vendors? In 2024, Celestica, NVIDIA, and Huawei led the Ethernet segment of the AI Back-end Switch market. However, we anticipate significant share shifts in 2025 as large-scale Ethernet deployments at Meta, Microsoft, Oracle, and other GPU-as-a-Service Providers ramp up—creating opportunities for additional switch vendors such as Accton, Arista, Cisco, Juniper/HPE, Nokia, and others to gain traction," continued Boujelbene. Additional highlights from the July 2025 AI Networks for AI Workloads Advanced Research Report: Growth from GPU-as-a-Service Providers such as CoreWeave, Lambda Labs, Vultr, and others is projected to outpace that of Tier 1 Cloud Service Providers in the next five years. The majority of the switch ports deployed in AI back-end networks are expected to be 800 Gbps by 2025, 1600 Gbps by 2027, and 3200 Gbps by 2030. Co-packaged optic adoption in AI clusters will start to materialize in the next few years, led by NVIDIA. About the Report Dell'Oro Group's AI Networks for AI Workloads Advanced Research Report explores the use cases that optimize InfiniBand vs. Ethernet in AI back-end networks, as well as the choices made by large Cloud Service Providers. The report also provides a 5-year market forecast on a worldwide basis, by customer type, by InfiniBand vs. Ethernet, and by port speed. For more information about the report, please contact us at dgsales@ About Dell'Oro Group Dell'Oro Group is a market research firm that specializes in strategic competitive analysis in the telecommunications, security, enterprise networks, and data center infrastructure markets. Our firm provides in-depth quantitative data and qualitative analysis to facilitate critical, fact-based business decisions. For more information, contact Dell'Oro Group at +1.650.622.9400 or visit View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Dell'Oro Group
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Trump accuses Schiff of mortgage fraud, which Schiff calls false 'political retaliation'
President Trump on Tuesday accused Sen. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) of committing mortgage fraud by intentionally misleading lenders about his primary residence being in the suburbs of Washington, D.C., rather than California, in order to "get a cheaper mortgage and rip off America." Schiff, who led a House impeachment of Trump during the president's first term and has remained one of his most vocal and forceful political adversaries since joining the Senate, dismissed the president's claims as a "baseless attempt at political retribution." A spokesperson for Schiff said he has always been transparent about owning two homes, in part to be able to raise his children near him in Washington, and has always followed the law — and advice from House counsel — in arranging his mortgages. In making his claims, Trump cited an investigation by the Fannie Mae "Financial Crimes Division" as his source. A memorandum reviewed by The Times from Fannie Mae investigators to William J. Pulte, the Trump-appointed director of the U.S. Federal Housing Finance Agency, does not accuse Schiff of mortgage fraud. It noted that investigators had been asked by the FHFA inspector general's office for loan files and "any related investigative or quality control documentation" for Schiff's homes. Investigators said they found that Schiff at various points identified both his home in Potomac, Md., and a Burbank unit he also owns as his primary residence. As a result, they concluded that Schiff and his wife, Eve, "engaged in a sustained pattern of possible occupancy misrepresentation" on their home loans between 2009 and 2020. The investigators did not say they had concluded that a crime had been committed, nor did they mention the word "fraud" in the memo. The memo was partially redacted to remove Schiff's addresses and information about his wife. Fannie Mae did not respond to a request for comment. Read more: Fannie Mae memo on Sen. Adam Schiff's residences In addition to denying any wrongdoing, Schiff also suggested that Trump's accusation was an effort to distract from a growing controversy — important to many in the president's MAGA base — over the administration's failure to disclose more investigative records into child sex abuse by the late financier Jeffrey Epstein, a former acquaintance of Trump's. There has long been rumors of a "client list" of Epstein's that could expose other powerful men as predators. Trump promised to release such a list as a candidate, and at one point Atty. Gen. Pam Bondi appeared to say such a list was on her desk. However, the administration has since said no such list exists, and Trump has begged his followers to move on. Schiff drew a direct line between that controversy and Trump's accusations against him Tuesday. "This is just Donald Trump's latest attempt at political retaliation against his perceived enemies. So it is not a surprise, only how weak this false allegation turns out to be," Schiff wrote on X. "And much as Trump may hope, this smear will not distract from his Epstein files problem." A spokesperson for Schiff echoed the senator's denial of any wrongdoing. According to the spokesperson, Schiff made a decision routine for Congress members from states far from Washington to buy a home in Maryland so he could raise his children nearby. He also maintained a home in California, living there when not in Washington. The spokesperson said all of Schiff's lenders were aware that he intended to live in both as he traveled back and forth from Washington to his district — making neither a vacation home. Read more: Schiff vs. Trump: The real head-to-head battle defining California's U.S. Senate race Trump's own post about Schiff, on his social media platform, was thin on details and heavy on insults, calling Schiff "a scam artist" and "crook." Trump alleged that Schiff reported his primary residence being in Maryland, when "he must LIVE in CALIFORNIA" as a congressman from the state. Schiff, a former federal prosecutor, has for years laid out detailed arguments against the president — and for why his actions violated the law and warranted his permanent removal from office. Those have included Trump's first presidential campaign's interactions with Russian assets, his pressuring Ukraine to investigate his rival Joe Biden while U.S. military aid was being withheld from the country, and his incitement of the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection and storming of the U.S. Capitol to prevent the certification of Biden's 2020 electoral win over him. Schiff also has criticized the president — and his businesses, family members and political appointees — for their own financial actions. He recently sponsored legislation that would restrict the ability of politicians and their family members from getting rich off of digital currencies of their own creation, as Trump and his family have done. He also has repeatedly demanded greater financial transparency from various Trump appointees, accusing them of breaking the law by not filing disclosures of their assets within required time frames. Others have accused Trump for years of financial fraud. Last year, a judge in New York ordered Trump to pay $355 million in penalties in a civil fraud case after finding that the president and others in his business empire inflated his wealth to trick banks and insurers. Trump denied any wrongdoing and has appealed the decision. All along the way, Trump has attacked Schiff personally, accusing him of peddling hoaxes for political gain and repeatedly suggesting that he should be charged with treason. During a presidential campaign stop in California last year — when Schiff was running for Senate — Trump called Schiff "one of the sleaziest politicians in history." Schiff made mention of Trump's treason claims in his response to the new allegation of mortgage fraud Tuesday, writing, "Since I led his first impeachment, Trump has repeatedly called for me to be arrested for treason. So in a way, I guess this is a bit of a letdown." Before leaving office, President Biden preemptively pardoned Schiff and the other members of the committee that investigated Trump's role in the Jan. 6 insurrection, anticipating that Trump would seek to retaliate against them for their work. Schiff said at the time that he did not want a pardon. He later dismissed an assertion from Trump that the pardons were "void" as another attempt at intimidation. Schiff was first elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 2000. He now splits his time between a two-story home in Potomac, Md., which he bought in 2003, according to property records, and a one-bedroom condo in a shopping area in downtown Burbank, which he bought in 2009. In 2023, amid a bruising primary race for his Senate seat, CNN reported on Schiff's two mortgages, citing experts who said the arrangement did not put Schiff in legal jeopardy — even if it could raise tough political questions. CNN reported that deed records showed Schiff had designated his Maryland home as his primary residence, including while refinancing his mortgage over the years. In 2020, the outlet reported, Schiff again refinanced his mortgage and indicated that the Maryland home was his second. CNN also reported that Schiff for years has taken a California homeowner's tax exemption for his Burbank home, also designating it as his primary address. CNN said that exemption amounted to "roughly $70 in annual savings." Schiff's spokesperson confirmed that estimate in annual savings in California, and noted that Schiff did not claim such an exemption in Maryland. Get the L.A. Times Politics newsletter. Deeply reported insights into legislation, politics and policy from Sacramento, Washington and beyond, in your inbox twice per week. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Wall Street Journal
an hour ago
- Wall Street Journal
CVS Beats Out UnitedHealth for Calpers Pharmacy Benefits Deal
CVS Health's CVS -0.65%decrease; red down pointing triangle Caremark business signed a new pharmacy benefits contract with the California Public Employees' Retirement System, known as Calpers. The five-year contract provides outpatient drug benefits for about 587,000 Calpers members, which represents roughly 40% of its clients that receive healthcare benefits. CVS will begin providing benefits starting on Jan. 1.