Sequoia Capital just blew up the VC fund model

4 min read Original article ↗

Sequoia Capital, one of the world's oldest and most successful venture capital firms, is forming a single fund to hold all of its U.S. and European investments, including stakes in publicly-traded companies, Axios has learned.

Why it matters: Venture capital is the money of innovation, but the industry itself rarely innovates. This is a radical exception.

Details: The Sequoia Fund will serve as an open-ended capital vehicle; the sole limited partner for all future Sequoia "sub-funds" (seed, venture, growth, etc.). Sub-fund managers will decide on when to contribute assets into The Sequoia Fund, optimizing for their own return profiles.

More: Sequoia also plans to become a registered investment advisor, which could let it expand its investments in areas like crypto and secondaries. The firm also told investors that it doesn't plan to ever become publicly-traded.

The why: Sequoia argues that all of this is designed to better align interest between itself and founders, and itself and limited partners.

Tax consequences: Sequoia currently holds around $45 billion of U.S. and European public equities, on a cost basis of just $2 billion, and already has agreed to put much of that into The Sequoia Fund (including shares of companies like Airbnb).

Timeline: The firm began discussing this concept nearly a year ago, in consultation with a select group of limited partners. Earlier this year it asked LPs to approve some top-level structure changes, without providing details, and this past Monday shared specifics. LP information sessions are scheduled for tomorrow and Thursday.

The bottom line: Venture capital is often about fast follows, and rival firms might have called management meetings before getting to the end of this story. But the odds are that Sequoia will stand alone on making these sorts of changes, due to its outsized public holdings and its unparalleled brand reputation.