Close Menu
The Financial News 247The Financial News 247
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Companies
  • Investing
  • Markets
  • Lifestyle
  • Tech
  • More
    • Opinion
    • Climate
    • Web Stories
    • Spotlight
    • Press Release
What's On
Apple iOS 26.4.2 New iPhone Software: Should You Upgrade?

Apple iOS 26.4.2 New iPhone Software: Should You Upgrade?

April 23, 2026
PopStroke’s Growth Redefines Golf Entertainment, With Wall Street Ties

PopStroke’s Growth Redefines Golf Entertainment, With Wall Street Ties

April 23, 2026
Ken Griffin’s Citadel claps back at Mamdani’s viral ‘penthouse’ video –threatens to scrap B NYC development

Ken Griffin’s Citadel claps back at Mamdani’s viral ‘penthouse’ video –threatens to scrap $6B NYC development

April 23, 2026
AI Fears Keep Hammering Software Stocks—Even Those With Strong Earnings

AI Fears Keep Hammering Software Stocks—Even Those With Strong Earnings

April 23, 2026
Lumas Tests Art’s Airport Potential With Frankfurt Terminal 3 Debut

Lumas Tests Art’s Airport Potential With Frankfurt Terminal 3 Debut

April 23, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
The Financial News 247The Financial News 247
Demo
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Companies
  • Investing
  • Markets
  • Lifestyle
  • Tech
  • More
    • Opinion
    • Climate
    • Web Stories
    • Spotlight
    • Press Release
The Financial News 247The Financial News 247
Home » WHOOP Health Platform Gets Glitzy Investors, Makes Big Promises

WHOOP Health Platform Gets Glitzy Investors, Makes Big Promises

By News RoomMarch 31, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Telegram Reddit Email Tumblr
WHOOP Health Platform Gets Glitzy Investors, Makes Big Promises
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

If ESPN married the Wall Street Journal, the guest list might read like the list of the investors who just gave the artificial intelligence-powered WHOOP health platform more than a half billion dollars.

The company’s wearable connects to an analystics platform that promises its data will do nothing less than help users “extend healthspan, optimize performance and prevent disease before it begins.” That potential won WHOOP a Series G investment of $575 million and a valuation of $10.1 billion from, in the company’s words, “the world’s most sophisticated investors, leading health institutions and iconic global athletes.”

The name-dropping is impeccably impressive. On the sports side, a partial list includes LeBron James, one of the greatest basketball players in history; Cristiano Ronaldo, a candidate for that same honor in what we call soccer and the rest of the world calls football; and Rory McIlroy, who during his career was ranked the number one golfer in the world for over 100 weeks. On the finance side there is the Qatar Investment Authority; the Mubadala Investment Company, the sovereign wealth fund of the United Arab Emirates; and Abu Dhabi’s giant 2PointZero Group. To show the health care industry’s support for the happy couple, you’ve got Abbott Laboratories and the Mayo Clinic.

The entire round, meanwhile, was led by the Collaborative Fund, whose mission “is to identify and support companies that live at the intersection of for-profit and for-good.”

Performance vs. Promises

Right now, the “for-good” part requires an asterisk. The WHOOP press release says its biometric monitoring system “has become an essential platform for those committed to performing and living at their highest level.” However, it remains less clear the extent to which the platform will be adopted by those for whom performing and living at the “highest level” is less of a concern that simply having adequate health and wealth to enjoy life with family and friends.

The WHOOP device, worn on the wrist or body, is meant to track “optimal sleep” and monitor resting heart rate and heart rate variability, as well as key metrics “scientifically proven to make the most significant impact on your health.” It will do this “powered by more than 24 billion hours of physiological data and purpose-built AI models,” providing “predictive, personalized health insights” – at least, as long as you continue paying your annual membership fee.

And why wouldn’t you, when, as WHOOP explains about its “health operating system,” you will now have the opportunity to expand your “healthspan” to an extent that, the company implies, would be the envy of Egyptian pharaohs, China’s first emperor and Ponce de Leon.

The device certainly has enthusiasts. Others, however, are more restrained in their endorsement. A June, 2025 review by John O’Connor, founder of a company that uses a proprietary algorithm to recommend a personalized diet based on genetics (perhaps the ideal WHOOP user), compared the company’s strap to the Oura ring, also a biometric tracker. O’Connor goes down a list of personal pros and cons – I wonder whether those world-class athletes get annoyed by the product getting wet in the shower? – but concludes that the product, “especially when worn for years, is a good window into your current state of health.”

In that same modest vein, an article in the journal Sensor examined nearly a million days and nights of longitudinal data from WHOOP subscribers (with the company’s participation in the study) and concluded there was “real-world evidence that sustained wearable engagement may support healthier habits and improved physiological outcomes over time.”

Not quite pharaonic, but certainly encouraging.

The Big Picture

Last October, Oura raised $900 million in a Series E round that valued it at $11 billion, although the Finnish company failed to cite a single famous athlete as a participant. What both the WHOOP and Oura capital raises have in common – and there are other companies competing in this space – is that they significantly raise the profile of what the academics call “patient-reported health data” by demonstrating the potential of AI to significantly improve the degree to which this type of information can be made personally and clinically relevant and actionable.

The breadth of metrics that are measured accurately and consistently isn’t quite where it needs to be, nor is the wearability comfort. But, of course, LeBron, Renaldo and McIlroy didn’t start off as world champions, either. When we do get there, perhaps LeBron, now known as “King James,” will assume the title of “PROM King.” That, of course, would refer to “patient-reported outcome measures.”

Collaborative Fund fitness tracker health trackers LeBron James Oura patient-reported health data personal health predictive analytics WHOOP
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related News

Apple iOS 26.4.2 New iPhone Software: Should You Upgrade?

Apple iOS 26.4.2 New iPhone Software: Should You Upgrade?

April 23, 2026
AI Fears Keep Hammering Software Stocks—Even Those With Strong Earnings

AI Fears Keep Hammering Software Stocks—Even Those With Strong Earnings

April 23, 2026
AI Is Coming For The Design Stack

AI Is Coming For The Design Stack

April 23, 2026
Bangladesh’s B Garment Industry Faces Next Test: Moving Beyond Low Cost-Manufacturing

Bangladesh’s $39B Garment Industry Faces Next Test: Moving Beyond Low Cost-Manufacturing

April 23, 2026
Audio Giant JBL Celebrates 80 Years In The Sound Business

Audio Giant JBL Celebrates 80 Years In The Sound Business

April 23, 2026
8 Days Left To Claim Up To ,000

8 Days Left To Claim Up To $6,000

April 23, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss
PopStroke’s Growth Redefines Golf Entertainment, With Wall Street Ties

PopStroke’s Growth Redefines Golf Entertainment, With Wall Street Ties

News April 23, 2026

When former Wall Street executive Greg Bartoli began acquiring several properties in South Florida in…

Ken Griffin’s Citadel claps back at Mamdani’s viral ‘penthouse’ video –threatens to scrap B NYC development

Ken Griffin’s Citadel claps back at Mamdani’s viral ‘penthouse’ video –threatens to scrap $6B NYC development

April 23, 2026
AI Fears Keep Hammering Software Stocks—Even Those With Strong Earnings

AI Fears Keep Hammering Software Stocks—Even Those With Strong Earnings

April 23, 2026
Lumas Tests Art’s Airport Potential With Frankfurt Terminal 3 Debut

Lumas Tests Art’s Airport Potential With Frankfurt Terminal 3 Debut

April 23, 2026
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Our Picks
McDonald’s fights to hold onto ‘Extra Value Meal’ moniker after patent office rejections

McDonald’s fights to hold onto ‘Extra Value Meal’ moniker after patent office rejections

April 23, 2026
AI Is Coming For The Design Stack

AI Is Coming For The Design Stack

April 23, 2026
Trump’s Pay-To-Play ‘Gold Card’ Visa Draws Just 1 Approval So Far

Trump’s Pay-To-Play ‘Gold Card’ Visa Draws Just 1 Approval So Far

April 23, 2026
Amazon stripping hundreds of employees’ job titles, replacing them with ‘builders’

Amazon stripping hundreds of employees’ job titles, replacing them with ‘builders’

April 23, 2026
The Financial News 247
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact us
© 2026 The Financial 247. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.