AI funding is booming. The VC recovery? Two firms in a trench coat. Startup Fundraising — today, we step back from the deal-by-deal and ask what 2,049 newly funded AI companies actually add up to when the money keeps pooling in the same two places. Tap follow so the next episode finds you. From Mufgamericas:
The number of newly funded global AI companies increased to 2,049 in 2024, an 8.4% y/y increase. Generative AI companies accounted for over 10% of the total with 214 companies receiving funding, up from just 21 five years prior.
Here's the number that actually reframes the week — Stanford's AI Index puts 2,049 newly funded AI companies globally in 2024. Up 8.4 percent. All week, we've been talking dollars; this is the first time we've got a headcount. And that headcount is the tell, not the megadeals. Eight-point-four percent more companies chasing an LP pool that's clearly collapsing toward the biggest names. Most of these 2,049 aren't getting a second institutional meeting. Watch the denominator on the gen AI line — 214 companies funded in 2024, up from 21 five years ago. A clean ten times in company count. But the global dollar total is still nearly half the 2021 peak. So the average check is compressing hard. Someone's getting a lot less than the headline implies — and it's not the platform rounds. Ten times the companies, less than half the money. Do that math out two years. Then there's the concentration — over 80 percent of private AI investment flowed to US firms. The headcount split is lopsided enough: 1,073 of those companies are American. But the dollars are even more skewed than the company count. Right. The US has a majority of the companies and an overwhelming majority of the money. Those two gaps don't close — they widen. A data moat used to be a differentiator in this field. At 2,049 companies, it's table stakes, and most of them don't have one. So with a16z hoovering up $15 billion and Founders Fund closing a $4.6 billion growth vehicle, is LP capital actually coming back to the asset class broadly, or is this just gravity pulling money toward the biggest, safest brand names while everyone else starves? Pretty clearly the gravity story — and the data makes it hard to wave away. Global venture has come back to roughly $345 billion, up about 18% from 2024, but it's still nearly half the $643 billion peak in 2021, per the Value Add VC state-of-market piece. And the rebound is wildly concentrated: AI companies alone are taking 40 to 45% of all U.S. venture investment right now, so the headline recovery makes the distribution look healthier than it is. For emerging managers, the picture is brutal. LP re-up rates have fallen below 50%, fundraising timelines have stretched from 12 months to 18 to 24 months, and LPs are openly prioritizing DPI over IRR — distributed cash in hand — because most recent-vintage funds are sitting on near-zero distributions, per LPbacked Research. The megafund closes are real: Menlo's $3 billion fund, the largest in its 50-year history, largely on the back of its Anthropic stake now valued around $14 billion. But those are very specific stories: managers with verifiable markups and real exit momentum. For a first- or second-time fund without that proof, institutional LPs are basically closed for business unless the thesis is sharply differentiated. So when people point to that $300-plus billion in VC dry powder as a sign of underlying health, is it actually a meaningful signal for where new fund formation goes from here? Not really — per Value Add VC's breakdown, a lot of that dry powder is tied up in follow-ons for existing portfolios, older vintages past their investment periods, or stage mandates that make it structurally unavailable to new founders or new funds. The cleaner leading indicator is the shakeout already underway: an estimated 25 to 35% of funds raised during the 2020 to 2022 zero-rate era are expected to become zombies, unable to raise successor funds. So yes, the market is recovering — but mostly for one tier of it. Right now, that's pretty much the top decile. Got a fundraising question, a story idea, or a correction for us? Send it to startupfundraising at lantern podcasts dot com. We read your notes, and they help shape future episodes.
You’ll find links to every story from today’s Startup Fundraising in the show notes. If one caught your ear, that’s the place to dig in a little further.
That’s Startup Fundraising for today. This is a Lantern Podcast.