SUBSCRIBE
Tech Journal Now
  • Home
  • News
  • AI
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • Best Buy
  • Software
  • Games
Reading: Vega Cloud enters receivership, with millions in debt, in surprise turn for Spokane tech standout
Share
Tech Journal NowTech Journal Now
Font ResizerAa
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • AI
  • Best Buy
  • Games
  • Software
Search
  • Home
  • News
  • AI
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • Best Buy
  • Software
  • Games
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
Tech Journal Now > News > Vega Cloud enters receivership, with millions in debt, in surprise turn for Spokane tech standout
News

Vega Cloud enters receivership, with millions in debt, in surprise turn for Spokane tech standout

News Room
Last updated: January 18, 2026 11:17 pm
News Room
Share
7 Min Read
SHARE
Vega Cloud’s technology helps companies track and manage their cloud spending. (Vega Cloud Images, GeekWire Illustration)

Vega Cloud, a Spokane-area tech startup that makes software to help companies manage their cloud spending, has been placed into the hands of a receiver after declaring it could no longer pay its debts.

Among those debts: nearly $830,000 owed to cloud giant Amazon Web Services. 

Vega Cloud, founded in 2018 and based in Liberty Lake, Wash., had raised $12.2 million and reached about $7 million in annual revenue as of 2023, according to PitchBook data. It had also cracked the GeekWire 200 — ranking #181 in the most recent quarterly update of our Pacific Northwest startup index.

What brought Vega Cloud to this point isn’t clear. Responding to our email inquiry this weekend, co-founder and CEO Kris Bliesner said the company is going through a restructuring via receivership, and said he wished he could say more about the situation.

The company had less than $17,000 in the bank when it was placed into receivership Thursday, Jan. 15, in King County Superior Court in Seattle, the filing shows. It employed about 35 people as of earlier this month, down from about 65 two years ago, according to LinkedIn. 

Receivership is a state-level process often used as an alternative to bankruptcy. In this case, Vega Cloud executed what’s known as an Assignment for the Benefit of Creditors, which puts a neutral party in charge of the company, pauses creditor collections, and places decisions about asset sales and payments under court supervision.

Sometimes those assets sell mostly intact, allowing new investors to give a business another try. But at this point, it’s not yet clear what will happen to the company’s employees or product.

Past ambitions for an IPO

In a March 2024 interview for GeekWire’s special series on Spokane, Bliesner described Vega Cloud’s trajectory in optimistic terms, saying the company was planning a $20 million to $30 million funding round and eyeing the public markets.

“We’re trying to push the envelope at Vega to maybe do the IPO route,” Bliesner said at the time. “We think that’s a viable thing for us.”

Vega Cloud operates in the sector known as FinOps, short for financial operations, helping companies get a handle on their cloud spending by bringing together finance and technical teams to track costs and avoid waste.

This is becoming more and more important as businesses pour money into cloud computing, often without realizing how much they’re spending on unused resources. Vega Cloud focused specifically on helping mid-sized companies manage spending across AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud, using automated tools to spot problems and recommend fixes. 

In the tight-knit Spokane tech community, Vega Cloud has been seen as a startup with the potential to make it big. We took note of the company in 2022, when it raised $9 million.

Investor and entrepreneur Martin Tobias, a longtime fixture in Pacific Northwest enterprise tech, invested in Vega Cloud shortly after moving from Seattle to Spokane during the pandemic. He told us in early 2024 that it would probably be one of his most successful investments. 

Tobias said Bliesner was exactly the kind of founder he looks for: someone with deep experience in a market who had tried to solve something one way, realized it wasn’t going to scale, and came up with a better solution.

“He took a new approach to an old problem,” Tobias said at the time. 

Bliesner previously co-founded cloud migration startup 2nd Watch, which raised about $56 million before selling a majority interest to Singapore-based investor ST Telemedia.

Financial details from the filing

Vega Cloud’s court filings give an inside look at the privately held business.

First, the company had real customers and revenue. The filings list contracts with companies including Paramount, Hearst, Deloitte, Molina Healthcare, John Wiley & Sons, and Cal Poly, among others. It lists roughly $264,000 in accounts receivable.

The largest secured creditor is Sun Mountain Private Credit Fund I, owed $3.5 million. That debt is backed by Vega Cloud’s intellectual property — its software, patents, trademarks, and domain names. Any proceeds from a sale of those assets would go first to that lender.

In addition to the roughly $830,000 owed to AWS, the court records show convertible promissory notes totaling about $2.5 million that were issued to investors throughout 2025.

The records list current and former employees who are owed unpaid commissions, bonuses, and expense reimbursements, with some bonus obligations dating back to 2023. The company also owes payroll and withholding taxes to the IRS and multiple state tax agencies.

Bliesner is the largest shareholder at about 30%. Other significant investors include Album Ventures (10%), Cowles Company (3%), Rudeen & Company (3%), Kick-Start III and IV (combined 4%), Tacoma Venture Fund (1.5%), and Pitbull Ventures (1%). 

The shareholder list also includes Voyager Capital, Alliance of Angels, Incisive Ventures, and Morning Star Foundation, along with dozens of individual investors.

Under court supervision, the receiver can now take possession of Vega Cloud’s assets and records, secure its bank accounts and data, evaluate and sell assets such as intellectual property, collect remaining receivables, and distribute proceeds to creditors in priority order.

The filings do not include a timeline for asset sales or any plan for the business to continue operating. Those details typically emerge later through receiver reports.

Read the full article here

You Might Also Like

Ring around the parking lot: Amazon’s security company unveils a $5,000 surveillance trailer

‘It’s a Wonderful Life’ — but a lousy edit — if you click wrong version of holiday classic on Amazon

Washington’s ‘millionaires tax’ targets top earners as tech leaders warn of startup fallout

Joe Nguyen named Seattle Chamber president and CEO after leaving Washington state Commerce role

What Microsoft has learned about housing, and why it’s urging the state to unlock commercial land

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

- Advertisement -
Ad image

Trending Stories

Games

Anime action RPG studio Pahdo Labs shuts down despite accruing $17.5M in funding: ‘We believed making a demo of a familiar but new game would be our best shot’

February 4, 2026
News

Tech Moves: Tableau CEO steps down; Microsoft taps new executive VPs; Avanade’s new CEO

February 4, 2026
Games

Good news, Stardew Valley enthusiasts: the 1.7 update will make children ‘a little more interesting’ and add two new marriage candidates

February 4, 2026
Games

As a Sims 4 Build Mode freak, today’s free update is way more important than the new expansion

February 4, 2026
Games

Why does isometric perspective suit Disco Elysium? ‘You can design the entire game as if it was a painting’

February 4, 2026
Games

How to get a Lucky Clover in Terraria

February 4, 2026

Always Stay Up to Date

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

Follow US on Social Media

Facebook Youtube Steam Twitch Unity

2024 © Prices.com LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Tech Journal Now

Quick Links

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • For Advertisers
  • Contact
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?