エピソード

  • Silicon Valley Shifts: AI Infrastructure and Quantum Computing Lead VC Trends in 2026
    2026/01/17
    Silicon Valley venture capital firms are navigating a recalibrated landscape in early 2026, with AI infrastructure grabbing massive funding amid healthcare VC pullbacks and emerging bets on quantum computing. Listeners, just yesterday on January 16, database powerhouse ClickHouse closed a whopping 400 million dollar Series D round at a 15 billion dollar valuation, led by Dragoneer with heavyweights like Khosla Ventures, Lightspeed, and Index Ventures joining in. ClickHouse reports its annualized recurring revenue surged over 250 percent last year, powering AI apps for clients like Meta, Tesla, and Sony. The deal funds an acquisition of AI observability startup Langfuse and a new Postgres service, signaling VCs' hunger for data tools that tame AI's production-scale demands. Dragoneer partner Christian Jensen notes that as AI models advance, data infrastructure becomes the real bottleneck.

    Healthcare tells a split story. Silicon Valley Bank’s latest report shows 46.8 billion dollars in healthcare VC last year, down 12 percent from 2024 and far from 2021's 68.3 billion peak, with AI snagging 46 percent or over 18 billion dollars. Bain and Company highlights private equity booming to a record 191 billion dollars in healthcare deals, driven by biopharma and IT, as VCs get pickier, prioritizing clinical proof and efficiency.

    Cybersecurity bucks the caution trend. Crunchbase data reveals 18 billion dollars invested in 2025, up 26 percent year-over-year and the highest in three years, fueled by AI plays like Cyera's 940 million dollars and Saviynt's 700 million at a 3 billion valuation. Early-stage deals jumped 63 percent to 7.5 billion dollars, with U.S. firms dominating 74 percent.

    A fresh twist: quantum computing is stealing AI's thunder. Times-Online reports VC flows into quantum startups outpaced AI for the first week of 2026, sparked by Microsoft and Quantinuum's 24 entangled logical qubits breakthrough. Investors see it as the post-silicon heir, with IonQ shining at CES and Quantinuum eyeing a 10 billion dollar IPO.

    Economic headwinds like high rates persist, but firms respond by doubling down on AI efficiency, cybersecurity resilience, and frontier tech. Regulatory shifts, from U.S. export controls to Europe's Quantum Act, push sovereignty plays, hiking costs but favoring locals. Climate tech and diversity get nods in selective portfolios, though AI and infra lead.

    These trends point to a leaner, smarter VC era: mega-rounds for proven scalers, rotations to quantum, and exits like Google's 32 billion Wiz bid. Silicon Valley's future? Infrastructure kings and next-gen compute will define winners in a geopolitically charged world.

    Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

    For more http://www.quietplease.ai

    Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
    続きを読む 一部表示
    3 分
  • Silicon Valley VCs Surge Ahead Amidst Economic Challenges, Pouring Billions into AI, Defense Tech, Climate, and Biotech
    2026/01/14
    Silicon Valley venture capital firms are charging ahead amid economic headwinds, pouring billions into AI, defense tech, climate innovation, and biotech as of January 13, 2026. Techstartups.com reports a blockbuster day of funding totaling over $900 million across 10 major deals, signaling robust investor confidence despite market jitters.

    Defense tech led the charge with Onebrief raising $200 million from Battery Ventures and Sapphire Ventures to scale AI-powered mission planning for U.S. military commands, hitting a $2.15 billion valuation. Defense Unicorns followed with $136 million from Bain Capital, surpassing unicorn status for secure software on classified networks. These rounds highlight a pivot to national security tech, blending AI with real-world defense needs.

    AI infrastructure boomed too. Deepgram secured $130 million in Series C funding at a $1.3 billion valuation, led by AVP, to expand enterprise voice intelligence used by NASA and AWS. WitnessAI grabbed $58 million from Sound Ventures to secure autonomous AI agents, while Flip raised $20 million for vertical AI customer service in retail and healthcare. According to Techstartups.com, these deals reflect a surge in enterprise AI, with investors betting on scalable platforms amid regulatory scrutiny over AI safety.

    Climate tech gained traction as Ammobia emerged with $7.5 million seed from Chevron Technology Ventures and Shell Ventures to produce green ammonia, cutting emissions in fertilizers and fuels. JetZero landed $175 million from B Capital and Northrop Grumman for fuel-efficient blended-wing aircraft, pushing sustainable aviation.

    Biotech shone with Silicon Valley's Juvena Therapeutics closing $33.5 million Series B, led by Bison Ventures and Eli Lilly, to advance AI-discovered regenerative biologics for aging diseases. Syneron Bio raised nearly $100 million for AI-powered peptide drugs, and Converge Bio pulled $25 million from Bessemer Venture Partners for drug discovery.

    Yet challenges loom. A proposed California billionaires tax, per ABC News, has Silicon Valley titans like Box CEO Aaron Levie warning of an exodus, with Google co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin shifting assets to Florida. This regulatory pressure could drive capital flight, though firms like Pegasus Tech Ventures stay bullish, backing neurotech winners like Neurosoft Bioelectronics in recent competitions.

    Firms are responding by doubling down on high-impact deep tech over consumer apps, prioritizing defense, AI security, and climate to weather volatility. Top VCs like Bessemer, Bain, and Tiger Global lead oversubscribed rounds, showing selective but fierce deployment.

    These trends point to a resilient VC future: more concentrated bets on AI-defense-climate intersections, less tolerance for unproven ideas, and potential shifts outside California if taxes bite. Listeners, tune in next time for more insights. Thank you for tuning in and please subscribe. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

    For more http://www.quietplease.ai

    Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
    続きを読む 一部表示
    4 分
  • Silicon Valley Venture Capital Firms Surge Amid $100 Billion Funding Boom, AI Dominating Investments
    2026/01/12
    Silicon Valley venture capital firms are roaring back into action amid a global funding surge, with over $100 billion poured into tech startups in Q4 2025 alone, up 40% from the prior year, according to Sergey Tereshkins startup news roundup on January 11. The venture winter is over, and AI remains the hottest ticket, fueling record rounds like OpenAIs $40 billion raise, Anthropics $13 billion, and xAIs $10 billion, as mega funds from SoftBank and Gulf sovereigns flood the market.

    Top firms are responding to economic rebounds by deploying massive dry powderhundreds of billions in uninvested capital. Tiger Global launched a $2.2 billion fund with a selective edge, while Bessemer Venture Partners joined Torqs $140 million Series D at a $1.2 billion valuation for AI-driven security, per SiliconANGLE on January 11. Owl Ventures and Microsofts M12 backed Cloudforces $10 million Series A to scale equitable AI in education and healthcare, reports The AI Insider on January 12.

    Trends show diversification beyond AI into climate tech, biotech, fintech, and defense, with 2025 North American investments hitting $280 billion, 60% AI-focused but late-stage rounds up 75%, per Tereshkin. Climate projects gain traction amid decarbonization pushes, and robotics funding jumped 74% to $40.7 billion. Consolidation waves like Googles $32 billion Wiz buyout signal strong M&A exits.

    Economic challenges persist, thoughCalifornia faces backlash from a proposed 5% tax on billionaire assets over $1 billion, prompting Google founders to shift to Nevada and Delaware, warns HeyGoTrade. Fox Business notes Chamath Palihapitiya highlighting a $1 trillion wealth exodus risk. Regulatory shifts spur caution, yet IPO revivals like Chimes 30% pop boost confidence.

    Firms emphasize efficiency, profitability, and global reachIndia, Middle East, and Africa birth unicornswhile Silicon Valley leads with disciplined bets. These shifts point to a resilient VC future: AI dominance with broader sectoral plays, mega exits via IPOs and M&A, and adaptation to taxes via geographic diversification, setting up sustained growth into 2026 and beyond.

    Thanks for tuning in, listenersremind to subscribe for more updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

    For more http://www.quietplease.ai

    Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
    続きを読む 一部表示
    3 分
  • Silicon Valley Venture Capital Shifts Toward AI, National Priorities, and Regulatory Influence
    2026/01/10
    Silicon Valley venture capital is entering a new phase defined by consolidation of power, an AI-driven funding rebound, and a more political, regulatory-aware stance.

    According to Crunchbase News, North American startup funding surged to about 280 billion dollars in 2025, up roughly 46 percent from the prior year, with the majority of capital flowing into artificial intelligence. That rebound follows one of the toughest fundraising environments for venture firms since 2017, as higher interest rates and tech valuation resets forced many funds to pull back or slow deployment. Now, instead of broad-based exuberance, capital is concentrating in a handful of mega-platforms.

    The clearest example is Andreessen Horowitz, or a16z. Crunchbase and TechCrunch report that the firm just closed more than 15 billion dollars in fresh capital, its largest haul ever, bringing assets under management to over 90 billion and representing more than 18 percent of all US venture dollars raised in 2025. The money is being funneled into targeted themes: roughly 6.75 billion for growth-stage deals, 1.7 billion each for apps and infrastructure where core AI platforms live, around 1.2 billion for its American Dynamism initiative focused on defense, security, and critical infrastructure, plus 700 million for bio and health and several billion more for other strategies.

    This scale is reshaping the market. The Los Angeles Times notes that a16z’s new growth fund is backing companies like Databricks, coding assistant startup Cursor, and defense unicorn Anduril, signaling a tilt toward later-stage AI and dual-use technologies that can weather macro volatility. At the same time, the firm is de-emphasizing areas like traditional gaming while doubling down on sectors that align with national priorities such as defense, biotech, and advanced manufacturing.

    Those choices are tightly linked to regulation and geopolitics. The LA Times reports that a16z has helped back a 100 million dollar political network aimed at influencing US AI policy, while co-founder Marc Andreessen has become a vocal figure in national tech debates. TechCrunch highlights the firm’s American Dynamism portfolio, which mirrors Pentagon interests with companies like Anduril and Shield AI. The message to listeners is that top Silicon Valley firms are no longer just picking startups; they are actively shaping the regulatory and industrial landscape they invest into.

    Across the ecosystem, listeners are seeing three big shifts in strategy. First, an end to “growth at all costs” and a focus on capital-efficient AI infrastructure, defense tech, and mission-critical software that can support sustainable revenue. Second, growing attention to climate and industrial transition, as funds look for grid software, battery tech, and carbon management platforms that benefit from both government incentives and corporate demand. Third, increased scrutiny on diversity and inclusion, with many limited partners pressuring firms to back a broader range of founders and to track outcomes more transparently, even if progress remains uneven.

    In practical terms, this means larger checks going into fewer companies, more syndicates built around a16z, Sequoia, and a small group of peers, and a higher bar for non-AI or non-strategic sectors to attract capital. Startups in AI, defense, cybersecurity, and climate tech are finding it easier to raise, while consumer apps without a strong AI or community angle are struggling.

    Looking ahead, these trends suggest a Silicon Valley where venture capital looks more like national industrial policy by proxy. Mega-firms will likely continue to partner with sovereign wealth funds and large pensions, lean into AI and defense, and work closely with regulators on issues from safety to export controls. For listeners, the future of venture in the Valley is not just about chasing the next unicorn, but about funding the technologies that will define economic security, climate resilience, and the balance of power in AI.

    Thanks for tuning in, and make sure to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

    For more http://www.quietplease.ai

    Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
    続きを読む 一部表示
    5 分
  • Silicon Valley VCs Fuel AI Boom: Blockbuster Exits, AI-Powered Infrastructure, and Vertical Plays Dominate
    2026/01/07
    Silicon Valley venture capital firms are charging into 2026 with explosive AI investments, blockbuster exits, and bets on infrastructure amid economic headwinds like high interest rates and regulatory scrutiny. According to The Silicon Review, last year's deals like Nvidia's 20 billion dollar licensing pact with Groq and Meta's over 2 billion dollar buyout of Manus set the stage, with AI snagging 50 percent of global funding in 2025. OpenAI hit 500 billion dollars valuation while Anthropic reached 183 billion dollars on surging revenue.

    Top firms like Felicis led Mercor's 350 million dollar Series C at a 10 billion dollar valuation, pivoting to AI training data experts that rocketed annual recurring revenue from 75 million to over 450 million dollars in months. Coatue spearheaded DayOne Data Centers' massive 2 billion dollar plus Series C, per SiliconANGLE, to build AI-powered facilities in Finland and Singapore with 1 gigawatt in commitments, joining Lambda's 1.5 billion dollar raise. Crunchbase reports U.S. semiconductor startups shattered records with 6.2 billion dollars funded, up 85 percent, highlighted by Cerebras' 1.1 billion dollar haul and PsiQuantum's 1 billion dollar round, even as Groq cashed out big to Nvidia.

    Firms are shifting from general AI hype to vertical plays in enterprise search like Glean's 7.2 billion dollar valuation after a 150 million dollar raise from Wellington Management, and developer tools such as Lovable's vibe-coding platform exploding to 200 million dollars ARR. Replit turned around with 150 million dollars ARR via AI for non-coders. Human-AI hybrids shine too, with micro1 hitting 100 million dollars ARR supplying experts to OpenAI and Microsoft.

    Economic challenges prompt caution, yet data center and chip bets counter power shortages and inference demands. Regulatory pressures on big tech spur compliance startups like Delve and Norm AI, valued at 300 to 500 million dollars. Climate tech lags but humanoid robots draw skepticism at Silicon Valley Summit, per Carrier Management, as capital-intensive plays. Diversity gains traction with young founders like 24-year-old micro1 CEO Ali Ansari.

    These trends signal VC's future: concentrated on AI infrastructure, human expertise layers, and rapid scalers hitting nine-figure revenues in months, per The Silicon Review. Expect more M&A, fewer broad bets, and IPOs in semis as Nvidia-like giants consolidate.

    Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

    For more http://www.quietplease.ai

    Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
    続きを読む 一部表示
    3 分
  • Silicon Valley VCs Bet Big on AI Amidst Economic Turbulence
    2026/01/05
    Silicon Valley venture capital firms are doubling down on AI amid economic headwinds, with massive deals and shifts toward robotics and autonomous tech signaling resilience. Benchmark's early $75 million investment in Chinese-founded Manus, valued at $500 million then, paid off huge as Meta snapped it up for $2-3 billion on December 29, per Reuters and Silicon Republic reports. This acquisition highlights VC bets on general AI agents that handle tasks like market research and coding, now fueling Meta's push to billions of users.

    Bubble fears linger after Oracle's $10 billion data center backer pulled out, tanking shares, as noted by The Daily Upside and Financial Times. Yet Magnificent 7 giants like Microsoft and Google plan over $500 billion in AI hyperscaling for 2026, despite construction labor shortages needing half a million workers and McKinsey's $6.7 trillion global data center forecast by 2030. ABB's CEO told Reuters constraints on builders won't derail the buildout.

    Humanoid robots stole the show at this week's Silicon Valley Humanoids Summit, organized by ALM Ventures' Modar Alaoui, drawing 2,000 attendees. Once dismissed as capital-intensive duds, they're hot thanks to AI advances, with McKinsey counting 50 firms raising $100 million-plus, led by China's 20 versus North America's 15. Unitree dominated demos, but US skeptics like iRobot co-founder Rodney Brooks warn dexterity hurdles remain. Agility Robotics just deployed bird-legged Digit bots for Mercado Libre warehouses.

    Beyond AI, Kodiak AI partnered with Bosch at CES 2026 to scale self-driving trucks, building on driverless Permian Basin deliveries since January 2025, per TechCrunch. Lux Capital's Josh Wolfe sparked buzz on X about investing in a "free Iran," drawing nods from Google vet Jeff Huber and Maniv Mobility's Michael Granoff, eyeing deep-tech like AI and biotech post-regime change, as Iran International detailed amid Tehran protests.

    Funding stats show AI driving early-stage deals despite liquidity woes, per PitchBook's 2026 Outlook. Firms respond to challenges by leaning into US productivity booms from rapid AI adoption, economists say via European Business Magazine, while eyeing climate tech via energy transitions and diversity through diaspora talent pools.

    These trends point to a VC future laser-focused on AI embodiment in robots and autonomy, outpacing rivals despite regs and geopolitics. Silicon Valley's edge sharpens as capital chases scalable breakthroughs.

    Thank you listeners for tuning in, and please subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

    For more http://www.quietplease.ai

    Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
    続きを読む 一部表示
    3 分
  • Silicon Valley VCs Cautiously Optimistic in 2026 as AI Startups Raise Record $150B Globally
    2026/01/03
    Silicon Valley venture capital firms kicked off 2026 with cautious optimism amid a record-breaking 2025, where AI startups raised a staggering 150 billion dollars globally, according to eWeek reports, capturing nearly 50 percent of all startup funding. This surge redefined VC priorities, with 15 companies alone securing over 100 billion dollars in mega-rounds of 2 billion or more each, per Crunchbase data highlighted in Silicon Florist.

    Major trends show AI dominating, but investors are shifting from hype to pragmatism. TechCrunch experts predict 2026 will emphasize fine-tuned small language models for enterprises, world models for spatial reasoning, and agentic workflows integrating into daily operations, as Sapphire Ventures partner Rajeev Dham notes agent-first solutions will take system-of-record roles across industries. Nvidia led with 67 VC deals in 2025, up from 54 the prior year, per PitchBook, fueling semiconductor strength that pushed Nasdaq up 0.6 percent on January 2 amid softening manufacturing PMI at 51.8, reports AInvest.

    Notable deals include Silicon Valley Acquisition Corps 200 million dollar IPO on December 24, 2025, with private placements adding 6.25 million, filed with the SEC. Foundation Capital forecasts AI evolving toward autonomous agents and new architectures, while GeekWire VCs debate an AI bubble, urging startups to prepare for risks.

    Economic challenges like trade policy volatility under Trump, Fed rate uncertainty with a potential dovish chair post-Powell, and manufacturing weakness are prompting responses. VCs eye diversification into climate tech and hiring for AI governance roles, with Dham bullish on sub-4 percent unemployment.

    Regulatory shifts, including Californias proposed billionaire tax, are accelerating outflows. David Sacks of Craft Ventures predicts Austin will replace San Francisco as tech capital and Miami New York as finance hub, citing socialism and high taxes; his firm opened an Austin office, echoing moves by 8VC and Thiel Capital. Y Combinator founder Garry Tan defends the Bay Area for 2.5 times higher unicorn odds but eyes Austin if taxes pass.

    These trends signal a maturing VC landscape: AI absorbs capital but faces bubble scrutiny, prompting pragmatic bets on enterprise tools and spatial AI. Regional shifts challenge Silicon Valleys dominance, potentially decentralizing innovation as firms chase tax havens and talent. Listeners, the future looks agent-driven and multipolar, reshaping VC into a more resilient force.

    Thank you for tuning in, and please subscribe for more insights. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

    For more http://www.quietplease.ai

    Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
    続きを読む 一部表示
    3 分
  • Silicon Valley VCs Ride AI-Fueled Wave Amid Economic Turbulence, Forecasting Massive Funding Rounds and Strategic Shifts in Late 2025
    2025/12/31
    Silicon Valley venture capital firms are riding an AI-fueled wave amid economic turbulence, with massive funding rounds and strategic shifts defining late 2025. According to TradingKey's recap of top AI events, hyperscalers like Microsoft, Google, Amazon, and Meta ramped capital expenditures from $256 billion in 2024 to a projected $443 billion in 2025, fueling an AI boom that propelled Nvidia to a $5 trillion market cap on $500 billion in chip orders. Goldman Sachs reports these giants will triple spending to $1.4 trillion from 2025 to 2027, betting big on compute power despite ROI skepticism.

    Notable deals highlight the frenzy. Meta splashed over $2 billion on Chinese AI startup Manus, per Fortune, underscoring Zuckerberg's spending spree and geopolitical tensions in talent sourcing. True Ventures, managing $6 billion, stuck to seed-stage discipline with $3-6 million checks amid mega-rounds for OpenAI, xAI, and Anthropic, as Silicon Valley Business Journal notes late-stage AI skew in 2025. True co-founder Jon Callaghan warns of risks in circular financing for hyperscalers' $5 trillion CapEx, calling it a capital-intense cycle.

    Firms are responding to challenges like DeepSeek's efficient open-source models challenging compute hegemony, per Deutsche Bank, and an emerging AI bubble with credit risks. Storage stocks like Micron and Western Digital surged 250-600% on AI data demands, TradingKey reports, while Intel's government-backed revival eyes onshoring. Investment shifts favor AI infrastructure over pure models, with Morgan Stanley forecasting $700 billion CapEx in 2027 from cloud giants plus CoreWeave.

    Climate tech and diversity get nods but lag AI dominance; European spinouts raised $9.1 billion in deep tech per Dealroom, inspiring U.S. funds, though growth capital gaps persist with U.S. money filling late-stage voids. Regulatory changes, like U.S. stakes in Intel, signal state capitalism in chips.

    These trends point to a future where VC consolidates around enduring AI leaders, prioritizing sustainable moats in energy, storage, and custom chips like Broadcom's ASICs over hype. Bubbles may burst, but compute as power endures, reshaping Silicon Valley into a battleground of capital endurance.

    Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more insights. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

    For more http://www.quietplease.ai

    Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
    続きを読む 一部表示
    3 分