Currencies32904
Market Cap$ 2.61T-7.46%
24h Spot Volume$ 53.81B+3.34%
DominanceBTC59.25%+0.80%ETH7.27%-5.86%
ETH Gas1.69 Gwei
Cryptorank
MainNewsMost-Active ...

Most-Active US Investors In January: a16z Only Investor To Warm Up To The New Year

Most-Active US Investors In January: a16z Only Investor To Warm Up To The New Year

This is a monthly feature that runs down some of the most-active investors in U.S.-based companies, looks at some of their most interesting investments, and includes some odds and ends of who spent what. See November’s most-active startup investors here.

The new year started rather cold and meekly for big-named firms investing in U.S. startups.

Only Andreessen Horowitz reached double-digits in its deal tally last month, with everyone else trailing well behind.

While January didn’t lack for big deals, apparently those deals were spread over a wide swath of investors.

Andreessen Horowitz, 13 deals

Andreessen Horowitz, just like it has several times in the past few months, led the way with a baker’s dozen of deals in January.

The Menlo Park, California-based giant co-led voice AI startup ElevenLabs’ $180 million round — along with Iconiq Growth — at a $3.3 billion valuation. The Brooklyn-based company allows creators, enterprises and others to use AI software to replicate voices in dozens of languages.

The firm also took part in Palo Alto, California-based Hippocratic AI’s $141 million Series B valuing the company at $1.6 billion. The AI startup develops a safety-focused large language model for healthcare. Andreessen Horowitz also was part of shopping platform Whatnot’s massive $265 million Series E at a valuation of nearly $5 billion.

However, a16z didn’t just go big. It also led a $24 million Series A for New York-based Raspberry AI, whose platform turns designers’ sketches into photorealistic renderings, showing in rich detail how products will look, fit and drape in real life.

General Catalyst, 8 deals

In a slow month, General Catalyst comes in second with eight announced deals last month involving U.S.-based startups.

Those investments include co-leading the $50 million Series C for Honolulu-based Onebrief, a web-based military planning software, with Insight Partners.

While not leading, General Catalyst participated in a few good-sized rounds, including San Francisco-based recruiting startup Mercor’s $75 million round that valued the company at a $2 billion, and cloud application platform Render’s $80 million Series C.

Alumni Ventures, 7 deals

Alumni Ventures lands next on the list with a relatively small total for the firm. In January 2024, Alumni made 19 deals involving U.S.-based startups. Last month, that number was only seven.

Like many in the VC world, Alumni seems to have its eye on AI. It co-led a $5 million Series A for Springbok Analytics, which offers an AI-powered healthcare platform to transform MRIs into three-dimensional analyses of muscles, as well as a $6.9 million seed for Final Round AI. Final Round says it’s developed an AI platform to help improve how people find employment.

Sequoia and Bessemer, 6 deals each

Two big names in venture come in next with a half-dozen deals each: Sequoia Capital and Bessemer Venture Partners.

Sequoia started the year with a big round in the world of crypto and digital assets, co-leading Phantom’s massive $150 million round with Paradigm that valued the startup at $3 billion. Phantom is a crypto wallet startup that helps buy, sell and store tokens and NFTs.

Bessemer, on the other hand, led a $20 million Series A for revenue platform HockeyStack and co-led a $77.5 million Series B for ShopMy, which connects brands with creators.

Also notable:

Related reading:

Methodology

This is a list of investors which took part in the most rounds involving U.S.-based startups. It does not include incubators or accelerators due to the fluctuations their investment numbers can have.

Illustration: Dom Guzman

Read the article at Crunchbase

Read More

The Week’s Biggest Funding Rounds: OpenAI Easily Tops Massive Week

The Week’s Biggest Funding Rounds: OpenAI Easily Tops Massive Week

This was a week right out of the free-spending days of 2021. Huge rounds were abundan...
Apr, 04, 2025
6 min read
by Crunchbase
SandboxAQ Adds $150M From Google, Nvidia And Others

SandboxAQ Adds $150M From Google, Nvidia And Others

Alphabet spinoff SandboxAQ — an AI and quantum computing startup — added another $150...
Apr, 04, 2025
1 min read
by Crunchbase
MainNewsMost-Active ...

Most-Active US Investors In January: a16z Only Investor To Warm Up To The New Year

Most-Active US Investors In January: a16z Only Investor To Warm Up To The New Year

This is a monthly feature that runs down some of the most-active investors in U.S.-based companies, looks at some of their most interesting investments, and includes some odds and ends of who spent what. See November’s most-active startup investors here.

The new year started rather cold and meekly for big-named firms investing in U.S. startups.

Only Andreessen Horowitz reached double-digits in its deal tally last month, with everyone else trailing well behind.

While January didn’t lack for big deals, apparently those deals were spread over a wide swath of investors.

Andreessen Horowitz, 13 deals

Andreessen Horowitz, just like it has several times in the past few months, led the way with a baker’s dozen of deals in January.

The Menlo Park, California-based giant co-led voice AI startup ElevenLabs’ $180 million round — along with Iconiq Growth — at a $3.3 billion valuation. The Brooklyn-based company allows creators, enterprises and others to use AI software to replicate voices in dozens of languages.

The firm also took part in Palo Alto, California-based Hippocratic AI’s $141 million Series B valuing the company at $1.6 billion. The AI startup develops a safety-focused large language model for healthcare. Andreessen Horowitz also was part of shopping platform Whatnot’s massive $265 million Series E at a valuation of nearly $5 billion.

However, a16z didn’t just go big. It also led a $24 million Series A for New York-based Raspberry AI, whose platform turns designers’ sketches into photorealistic renderings, showing in rich detail how products will look, fit and drape in real life.

General Catalyst, 8 deals

In a slow month, General Catalyst comes in second with eight announced deals last month involving U.S.-based startups.

Those investments include co-leading the $50 million Series C for Honolulu-based Onebrief, a web-based military planning software, with Insight Partners.

While not leading, General Catalyst participated in a few good-sized rounds, including San Francisco-based recruiting startup Mercor’s $75 million round that valued the company at a $2 billion, and cloud application platform Render’s $80 million Series C.

Alumni Ventures, 7 deals

Alumni Ventures lands next on the list with a relatively small total for the firm. In January 2024, Alumni made 19 deals involving U.S.-based startups. Last month, that number was only seven.

Like many in the VC world, Alumni seems to have its eye on AI. It co-led a $5 million Series A for Springbok Analytics, which offers an AI-powered healthcare platform to transform MRIs into three-dimensional analyses of muscles, as well as a $6.9 million seed for Final Round AI. Final Round says it’s developed an AI platform to help improve how people find employment.

Sequoia and Bessemer, 6 deals each

Two big names in venture come in next with a half-dozen deals each: Sequoia Capital and Bessemer Venture Partners.

Sequoia started the year with a big round in the world of crypto and digital assets, co-leading Phantom’s massive $150 million round with Paradigm that valued the startup at $3 billion. Phantom is a crypto wallet startup that helps buy, sell and store tokens and NFTs.

Bessemer, on the other hand, led a $20 million Series A for revenue platform HockeyStack and co-led a $77.5 million Series B for ShopMy, which connects brands with creators.

Also notable:

Related reading:

Methodology

This is a list of investors which took part in the most rounds involving U.S.-based startups. It does not include incubators or accelerators due to the fluctuations their investment numbers can have.

Illustration: Dom Guzman

Read the article at Crunchbase

Read More

The Week’s Biggest Funding Rounds: OpenAI Easily Tops Massive Week

The Week’s Biggest Funding Rounds: OpenAI Easily Tops Massive Week

This was a week right out of the free-spending days of 2021. Huge rounds were abundan...
Apr, 04, 2025
6 min read
by Crunchbase
SandboxAQ Adds $150M From Google, Nvidia And Others

SandboxAQ Adds $150M From Google, Nvidia And Others

Alphabet spinoff SandboxAQ — an AI and quantum computing startup — added another $150...
Apr, 04, 2025
1 min read
by Crunchbase