Sequoia Capital Launches $950M New Early-Stage Funds, Upholding "Our Next Investment Defines Us" Philosophy

Deep News
Oct 27

Despite increasing discussions about an AI bubble, Sequoia Capital maintains that its investment strategy remains unaffected by market euphoria.

"The market fluctuates, but our strategy stays consistent. We continue to seek exceptional founders building transformative companies," said Bogomil Balkansky, a partner at Sequoia Capital's early-stage investment team.

To demonstrate this continuity, Sequoia announced two new funds on Monday, similar in size to those launched roughly three years ago: a $750 million early-stage fund focused on Series A startups and a $200 million seed fund.

The launch follows a turbulent period for the legendary investment firm. In 2021, Sequoia underwent a major restructuring, establishing a perpetual main fund supplemented by "sub-funds" targeting specific strategies—primarily to retain long-term holdings in portfolio companies post-IPO. By late 2022, the firm suffered a significant financial blow, losing over $200 million from its investment in the collapsed crypto exchange FTX. In 2023, Sequoia also separated from its India and China divisions.

Now, the storied firm—known for early bets on Airbnb, Google, Nvidia, and Stripe—is refocusing on its core mission: backing promising founders at the earliest stages.

Balkansky emphasized this commitment: "Our goal has always been, and will remain, identifying these founders early, then rolling up our sleeves to actively support their company-building journey."

With soaring valuations in AI startups, Sequoia aims to invest at inception through these new funds, securing stakes at lower prices while locking in substantial equity.

Early-stage focus has become increasingly critical for Sequoia. As valuations skyrocket at unprecedented rates, early entry is key to investing at favorable terms.

This strategy is already paying off: Sequoia’s seed and Series A investments in AI-driven companies like Clay, Harvey, n8n, Sierra, and Temporal have multiplied in value.

Despite its strong Series A track record, Balkansky stressed that Sequoia intends to defend its edge by investing even earlier: "Our legacy and performance in ultra-early stages—often categorized as 'pre-seed' today—are exceptional."

He also highlighted Sequoia’s early judgment: recent first checks in cybersecurity tester Xbow, AI reliability firm Traversal, and DeepSeek rival Reflection AI—all of which later raised funds at much higher valuations. Behind the scenes, Sequoia recruited Databricks’ former CRO for Xbow’s board, connected Traversal with 30+ potential customers, and facilitated a meeting between Reflection AI and Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang—which led to Nvidia’s $500M investment in the startup.

Despite these successes, Sequoia continues striving to uphold its 50-year legacy as Silicon Valley’s top investor. To reinforce this ethos, its newly renovated office features an "Investor Wall," where each team member has handwritten the same reminder: "Our strength lies in the next investment we make."

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