4 Questions To Ask Yourself To Find Your Forever VC

According to the 2024 National Venture Capital Association Yearbook, at the end of 2023, there were over 3,400 venture capital firms in the United States. That year, over 13,600 deals closed, with a total value of over $170 billion. Clearly, plenty of VCs and founders are looking to get deals done.

I think there is a misconception that the balance of power is always in VCs’ hands, leaving founders begging for term sheets. VCs are often perceived as the “king makers” and decide, with the stroke of a pen, the founder’s fate in some type of “survival of the fittest” journey. READ MORE

Venture Capital’s Second(ary) Chance

For most of venture capital’s history, we’ve heard the mantra “illiquidity is a feature, not a bug.”

The assumption has been that investments are held until exit, with returns heavily weighted toward IPO or strategic acquisitions. For their patience, LPs would be rewarded with performance surpassing public-market equivalents. READ MORE

VC group urges Congress to protect IRA’s green tech tax credits

The National Venture Capital Association has joined the fight to save the Inflation Reduction Act’s clean energy tax credits.

In a letter to the House Ways and Means Committee, the NVCA expressed its support for green tech tax credits now that they’re on the chopping block. Similar to a letter to Congress from green tech business leaders, the NVCA letter emphasized the importance of reliable tax policy for economic development—especially when it comes to startups, which traditionally begin with no or low taxable income. READ MORE

Why AI Won’t Replace Venture Capitalists Any Time Soon

The Wall Street Journal recently reported on a data company using AI to forecast startups’ financial futures, and it caused quite a stir in venture capital circles. After all, that level of in-depth analysis has long been a core advantage afforded to a venture firm’s crack analytics team. With that edge somewhat offloaded to AI, it invites the question: Is it reasonable to think AI will replace VCs entirely?

Not in the foreseeable future. READ MORE

Secondaries as the new IPO is no passing fad—it’s a VC evolution

As venture capital has matured, growing 5x over the last 12 years to $350 billion, the scale of private holdings has never been greater. With the exit markets quiet and with both regulatory and market forces bringing uncertainty, there's an increase in pressure for exits. The VC business is predicated primarily on M&A and IPOs to produce returns. Still, given the economic volatility, VC firms will need to access the secondary market to thrive in this next economic era.

Venture capital buys shares in a company and holds them, typically for eight to 12 years. At some point, however, the firm must sell its shares. Sometimes, that occurs when a strategic acquirer buys them or when a company goes public and public market investors buy them. READ MORE

Global Venture Funding Slowed In April, Despite Strong AI Showing

Global venture funding totaled $23 billion in April 2025, flat year over year and down significantly month over month from $68 billion invested in March, Crunchbase data shows. 

April’s funding total marks one of the slowest months in the past year. 

The slow month follows an exceptionally strong March, which had the highest monthly funding amount since 2022 due to the single largest private financing on record — $40 billion for OpenAIREAD MORE

VC founder: Tariffs have triggered one big rethink on tech

Tech investors need to rethink how they put money to work in the new world order of Trump tariffs.

"I'd say for the last decade, 15 years, I mean everything that we were investing in, we'd say, is there a global TAM [total addressable market] for that? And I think then it was sort of, well, is there a global TAM, maybe less China? And now it is sort of, well, geez, you really do [need to] be the winner in the US at least," Greycroft co-founder and managing partner Dana Settle told Yahoo Finance at the Milken Institute Global Conference. READ MORE

The Forecasting Mistake That Costs You Funding

The founder walked into the investor meeting with confidence, maybe too much of it. The slides were tight, the story compelling, and when it came time to talk numbers, they delivered the classic line: “The market is worth $4 billion. If we capture just 2.5%, we’ll hit $100 million in revenue within four years.”

There was a pause. And not the kind you want. READ MORE

How AI is disrupting the VC and startup ecosystem

The startup playbook that built Uber, Airbnb, and DoorDash is becoming obsolete in real-time. As AI compresses jobs that once required hundreds of employees into algorithms, we’re witnessing the birth of a new company archetype—capital-efficient, immediately profitable, and surprisingly small. With a variety of software to use for all aspects of building a business—from Shopify for e-commerce to Stripe for payments—and low operating costs, innovation just keeps making everything that much more efficient. READ MORE

VC Is Down — But Private Placements for Post-IPO Companies Are Up

Investors, particularly hedge funds, are doing a paltry number of venture capital deals. In fact, only a few managers have made more than one or two investments this month — even after a quiet first quarter.


But hedge funds — especially those that specialize in life sciences and biopharma investments — are active in the post-IPO private placement market. Listed companies use private placements to raise additional capital from accredited investors such as mutual funds. (Securities law requires that these deals be marked at the stock’s closing price when the private placement is completed.) READ MORE

Today's Biggest Companies Are Acting Like VCs. Here's Why Startup Founders Need to Pay Attention.

A few years ago, if you asked a founder what they thought about corporate capital, the answer would've been simple: slow, bureaucratic and not worth the effort unless they're trying to acquire you. But that's not how it works anymore.

We're now seeing a shift that, frankly, would've seemed strange a decade ago — large corporations acting like VCs. They're not just launching "innovation labs" for show, but building full-blown venture arms, growth studios and capital teams that operate with the same urgency and risk appetite you'd find inside a fund. READ MORE