Founders Fund, a venture capital firm led by prominent Silicon Valley investor Peter Thiel, has successfully raised $6 billion to invest in late-stage companies. According to ChainCatcher, this marks the largest fundraising effort in the firm's history.
The majority of the funds, amounting to $4.5 billion, were contributed by limited partners, including sovereign wealth funds. An insider revealed that the remaining $1.5 billion came from Founders Fund's senior management and employees, including Peter Thiel himself. The firm's fourth growth-stage investment fund was rapidly assembled less than a year after the previous fund was launched, marking the fastest transition to a new fund in Founders Fund's two-decade history.
This swift establishment of a larger fund highlights the increasing demand for substantial financing among mature startups, which are increasingly opting for private investors over public markets. Other venture capital firms are also raising billions for late-stage investments, driven partly by tech companies' need for significant funds to cover expensive computing resources. For instance, Sequoia Capital recently raised approximately $7 billion for a new fund to enhance investments in large companies, while Thrive Capital has gathered a $10 billion fund, its largest to date.