VC Funds Struggling
Many emerging managers and first time VCs that raised in past 5 years are struggling to raise new funds
The effect will become evident sooner rather than later. Fundraising will be much harder
Anyone seeing this yet?
Many emerging managers and first time VCs that raised in past 5 years are struggling to raise new funds
The effect will become evident sooner rather than later. Fundraising will be much harder
Anyone seeing this yet?
I personally think it’s better to struggle early on than to give away money like candies to founders with dubious businesses who will then trick gullible employees into thinking that these companies’ massive valuations mean anything. I kid you not one founder told me once my equity was safer in the company than liquidated and put in the SP500, when I inquired about tender opportunities.
I have vested equity (that I painfully exercised) in a “2020-era unicorn” that has been a complete zombie ever since. I wish they’d just go out of business for me to at least declare a capital loss on my taxes.
I just have myself to blame clearly, so just stating an opinion.
>> I personally think it’s better to struggle early on than to give away money like candies to founders
I agree, and disagree. My business was bootstraped, we never took outside investment, and it succeeded and makes money. It employs 50 odd people and is a big fish in a fairly small pond.
We make the world better for a few thousand people (customers).
But our approach couldn't lead to a Facebook, or Amazon or Uber etc. Products like that work best once they achieve scale, and achieving scale is expensive. But Uber (goes example) works poorly with 50 drivers in 1 city.
For most businesses and most founders, more is achieved with less. Most businesses don't need scale to be effective.
But equally, the VC approach is necessary for some subset of problems.
You want to sell that equity to create a loss? If it’s worth zero, I’m happy to go through the exercise if it’s marketable. This offer is only good if it’s actually worthless and I’m not stiffing you on the value.
Could you structure a contract where you buy it for $1 and sell it back the next day for $1?
I could be misunderstanding, but this sounds like it would be a wash sale, which would prevent the seller from claiming the loss on their taxes.
https://www.investopedia.com/terms/w/washsale.asp
9 VC firms collected half of all money raised by US funds in 2024 - https://pitchbook.com/news/articles/us-vc-fundraising-concen... - December 11th, 2024
3 years ago, VCs in Bay Area tech were thriving. Now, they're 'bleeding cash.' - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42194832 - November 2024
Good. The entire self-described "tech" industry has become a stinking cesspool. Less of it would be an improvement.
oh no. the poor VCs.
This is a good thing, too many software products enshittify themselves because they're reliant on handouts from their investors.