New York Tech Media
  • News
  • FinTech
  • AI & Robotics
  • Cybersecurity
  • Startups & Leaders
  • Venture Capital
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • FinTech
  • AI & Robotics
  • Cybersecurity
  • Startups & Leaders
  • Venture Capital
No Result
View All Result
New York Tech Media
No Result
View All Result
Home Venture Capital

Venture Capital Is Having Its New York Moment

New York Tech Editorial Team by New York Tech Editorial Team
November 9, 2021
in Venture Capital
0
Venture Capital Is Having Its New York Moment
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Threshold Ventures partner Chirag Chotalia (left) and principal Megan Kelly (right) are tasked with growing the firm’s New York presence.

Threshold Ventures

In the 1980s, venture capital firm Sequoia set a tone for the tech investing industry with a Silicon Valley-first mantra: if we can’t ride a bicycle to it, we won’t invest. Today, that motto’s playing out a bit differently: on the streets of New York City, over Citi Bike.

And it’s Sequoia, which opted to launch a London office last year but still has no permanent presence in America’s most populous city, that hasn’t caught up to the VC zeitgeist. Everywhere you turn in New York startup circles, you’ll find investors who have either moved in recent months or been hired by West Coast firms looking to plant a flag.

Historically West Coast-based firms including Andreessen Horowitz, Craft Ventures, Greylock, Lightspeed Venture Partners, Redpoint and Threshold Ventures now have check-writing investors living in New York. Others are rumored to be looking – or at least looking the other way, as younger employees stay there for long stretches unofficially.

“I think every firm will have a New York office in the next 18 months,” one partner at a prominent Sand Hill Road firm without such a presence confided (anonymously) in the Midas Touch newsletter this past weekend. “Every single firm is talking about it.”

Planting the flag

For Threshold, formerly known as DFJ Venture, planting roots in New York was a business decision, cofounder Emily Melton says. Six of the firm’s most recent investments were based in New York, while nearly 40% of its Fund III companies maintained an East Coast-based founder, says partner Chirag Chotalia, who raised his hand and moved to Manhattan’s SoHo neighborhood in recent months. The firm also hired Megan Kelly, previously of First Round, Thrive Global and J.P. Morgan, as a principal. (Kelly was unavailable for comment, having recently gone on maternity leave.)

“I like to call it the Brady Bunch view: we can still do a partner meeting [on Zoom] where I can see everyone’s faces in the boxes,” says Melton. “But at the end of the day, we also believe there’s something about physical presence.” 

One firm making waves in the city is Andreessen Horowitz, the supersized firm that maintained an executive briefing center and support staff in New York in past years, but historically insisted investors reside in the Bay Area. That changed during the pandemic as teams went remote last year or chose from several cities where staff clustered. Now the firm is becoming a visible — and vocal on Twitter — part of the city scene, across multiple groups. From Andreessen Horowitz’s fast-growing crypto fund, chief operating officer Anthony Albanese lives full time in New York, while general partners Ali Yahya and Arianna Simpson have lived in the city for long stretches.

Andreessen Horowitz partner David Haber says widespread VC interest in New York should come as no surprise.

Andreessen Horowitz

Anchoring A16Z’s venture fund presence in New York is David Haber, who joined the firm in June from Goldman Sachs. Haber helped open Spark Capital’s office in New York nearly a decade ago before founding Bond Street and selling it to Goldman. Now he’s part of what peers say is a 20-person-plus team in New York; at least one other general partner, David Ulevitch, is in the process of purchasing a New York home. 

The recent success of tech companies going public in New York from ad tech to ecommerce and infrastructure has helped prove that New York must be taken seriously as a significant tech hub, Haber says. “The city feels really great. It’s not surprising to me that people are moving here,” he adds. “Venture is still a relationship business.”

Fintech frenzy

It’s no coincidence that Haber, Lightspeed’s New York-based partner Justin Overdorff and Greylock principal Seth Rosenberg all specialize in fintech. One of tech’s hottest areas by funding, fintech startups raised $39.2 billion for the year as of September 30, according to PitchBook, compared to $20.4 billion last year. And while Stripe and other fintech leaders historically grouped in Silicon Valley — in Plaid’s case, moving there from New York — a new generation of breakouts like Ramp is remaining in town.

Overdorff moved to New York just before the pandemic on behalf of Stripe, which saw benefit in having a veteran corporate development and strategy leader in the city, closer to Europe. Overdorff was already personally investing in a new generation of fintech companies increasingly based in the city, such as bank identity system Alloy. Overdorff’s pitch to Lightspeed to serve as its first East Coast partner was simple: “If you don’t have someone in New York, you’re going to miss out.” In September, he led a $100 million Series C funding round in Alloy on behalf of Lightspeed, valuing it at $1.4 billion. “I think fintech has rotated its headquarters to New York right now, at least from a talent perspective,” he says.

Fintech excitement is only being fueled further by the congregation of crypto and “Web3” founders in New York, says Rosenberg at Greylock. “The culture of crypto is even more decentralized and integrated into culture that’s outside of core software development,” he says. “The new mayor said he’s getting paid in Bitcoin for his first three paychecks. I think the underdog mentality here gives a renewed energy.” It’s not just crypto, either: other investors point to digital health and ecommerce as local startup hotbeds now minting unicorns like Spring Health.

No vests needed

Craft Ventures’ Lainy Painter moved to New York in February. “Five years ago, it was a real point of debate whether companies could scale outside the Bay Area… This way of thinking sounds ridiculous now,” she says.

Courtesy of Lainy Painter

There’s another, more personal reason for the trend as well: investors who prefer the city now don’t need to choose it over a job. “I chose to move to New York because it’s filled with arts and culture, diverse people and a massive economic engine,” says Lainy Painter, a partner at Craft Ventures. “It’s a new experience and I love having opportunities to meet with East Coast founders for coffee in the morning or even a show at the Comedy Cellar at night.”

“The reason VCs are moving here now is because they’re allowed to. The Bay Area has lost its stranglehold on tech,” adds Logan Bartlett, a partner at Redpoint who initially planned to move to San Francisco upon his hiring, before opportunistically staying put “People want to be in NYC for lifestyle reasons and because no one wears a Patagonia vest.”

What do New York’s longtime investors think of the competition to book lower Manhattan’s most popular happy hour spots? They’re welcoming, publicly — not that they have much choice. The good news: investors are following the deal activity, and more entrepreneurs are moving to New York or launching businesses there, they say. Union Square Ventures doubled down on a much larger office space for hosting events and techies passing through starting next summer, says partner Rebecca Kaden. At Lerer Hippeau, Caitlin Strandberg says she hopes more investors in town will lead to more collaboration, not less: “For me personally, it all means many more coffee meetings.”

Make no mistake: New York still has a long way to go to rival Silicon Valley. As of September 30, investors had poured $38.9 billion into area startups, 154% the city’s previous record, according to PitchBook; over the same period, Bay Area-based startups raked in $88.4 billion, itself up 133% from previous highs. But few investors expect the momentum to evaporate. “The other day I caught up with three VCs from top firms and all of them were either moving or really wanted to move to NYC,” says FirstMark partner Matt Turck. They hailed from firms like Altimeter and Kleiner Perkins. “The level of energy in NYC right now is like nothing I’ve ever seen before,” he adds.

Some may blur the lines of what living in New York means, however. Accel’s Amit Kumar says that despite his firm’s history of backing local businesses, he considers his current stay in the city a Covid-19 influenced work-from-home experiment; he still calls himself West Coast-based. And Andreessen Horowitz communications chief Rachael Horwitz cautioned that if last year’s trend for her fund continues, “as the weather gets colder… a lot of that energy may move to Miami.”

At Eniac Ventures, firm cofounder Nihal Mehta proposes an unusual metric for determining who’s a New Yorker and who’s not. “Maybe a good KPI to define how ‘New York’ you are is how many Knicks games you’ve been to,” he says. You’ll spot the poser VCs across the river, he adds, cheering on another recent-arrival startup investor: Brooklyn Nets star Kevin Durant.


Credit: Source link

Previous Post

For Founders Selecting The Right VC Firm Is More Complex Than It Seems

Next Post

Microsoft patches actively exploited Exchange, Excel zero-days (CVE-2021-42321, CVE-2021-42292)

New York Tech Editorial Team

New York Tech Editorial Team

New York Tech Media is a leading news publication that aims to provide the latest tech news, fintech, AI & robotics, cybersecurity, startups & leaders, venture capital, and much more!

Next Post
Microsoft patches actively exploited Exchange, Excel zero-days (CVE-2021-42321, CVE-2021-42292)

Microsoft patches actively exploited Exchange, Excel zero-days (CVE-2021-42321, CVE-2021-42292)

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Meet the Top 10 K-Pop Artists Taking Over 2024

Meet the Top 10 K-Pop Artists Taking Over 2024

March 17, 2024
Panther for AWS allows security teams to monitor their AWS infrastructure in real-time

Many businesses lack a formal ransomware plan

March 29, 2022
Zach Mulcahey, 25 | Cover Story | Style Weekly

Zach Mulcahey, 25 | Cover Story | Style Weekly

March 29, 2022
10 Raunchy Movies on Netflix You Won’t Regret Watching

10 Raunchy Movies on Netflix You Won’t Regret Watching

May 20, 2024
How To Pitch The Investor: Ronen Menipaz, Founder of M51

How To Pitch The Investor: Ronen Menipaz, Founder of M51

March 29, 2022
Japanese Space Industry Startup “Synspective” Raises US $100 Million in Funding

Japanese Space Industry Startup “Synspective” Raises US $100 Million in Funding

March 29, 2022
Startups On Demand: renovai is the Netflix of Online Shopping

Startups On Demand: renovai is the Netflix of Online Shopping

2
Robot Company Offers $200K for Right to Use One Applicant’s Face and Voice ‘Forever’

Robot Company Offers $200K for Right to Use One Applicant’s Face and Voice ‘Forever’

1
Menashe Shani Accessibility High Tech on the low

Revolutionizing Accessibility: The Story of Purple Lens

1

Netgear announces a $1,500 Wi-Fi 6E mesh router

0
These apps let you customize Windows 11 to bring the taskbar back to life

These apps let you customize Windows 11 to bring the taskbar back to life

0
This bipedal robot uses propeller arms to slackline and skateboard

This bipedal robot uses propeller arms to slackline and skateboard

0
laptop on glass table

Automat-it Cuts Deployment Friction as Monce Scales AI Order Processing on AWS

April 13, 2026
Lee's Famous Recipe Chicken

Why Lee’s Famous Recipe Chicken Is Betting on Hi Auto to Quietly Rewire the Drive-Thru

April 9, 2026
computer generated image of letters

San Francisco Tribune Lists 11 HumanX Startups Moving AI Closer to the Operating Core

April 8, 2026
Impala CEO and Highrise AI CEO

The Industrialization of AI Infrastructure: What Impala and Highrise AI Reveal About the Next Scaling Frontier

April 7, 2026
Employee Time Tracking

What is an Employee Time Tracking Solution? A Definite Guide for 2026

March 31, 2026
Voltify founders

Voltify Raises $30 Million Seed Round as It Challenges $1 Trillion Rail Electrification Model

March 31, 2026

Recommended

laptop on glass table

Automat-it Cuts Deployment Friction as Monce Scales AI Order Processing on AWS

April 13, 2026
Lee's Famous Recipe Chicken

Why Lee’s Famous Recipe Chicken Is Betting on Hi Auto to Quietly Rewire the Drive-Thru

April 9, 2026
computer generated image of letters

San Francisco Tribune Lists 11 HumanX Startups Moving AI Closer to the Operating Core

April 8, 2026
Impala CEO and Highrise AI CEO

The Industrialization of AI Infrastructure: What Impala and Highrise AI Reveal About the Next Scaling Frontier

April 7, 2026

Categories

  • AI & Robotics
  • Benzinga
  • Cybersecurity
  • FinTech
  • New York Tech
  • News
  • Startups & Leaders
  • Venture Capital

Tags

AI AI QSRs Allseated Automat-it AWS B2B marketing Business CISO CISO Whisperer Collaborations Companies To Watch cryptocurrency Cybersecurity Entrepreneur Fetcherr Finance FINQ Fintech Funding Announcement hi-tech Hi Auto Impala Investing Investors investorsummit Israel israelitech Leaders LinkedIn Leaders Metaverse Mindset Minnesota omri hurwitz PointFive PR QSR Real Estate start- up startupnation Startups Startups On Demand Tech Tech leaders Unlimited Robotics VC
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and conditions

© 2024 All Rights Reserved - New York Tech Media

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • FinTech
  • AI & Robotics
  • Cybersecurity
  • Startups & Leaders
  • Venture Capital

© 2024 All Rights Reserved - New York Tech Media