Berliner Boersenzeitung - Silicon Valley VCs navigate uncertain AI future

EUR -
AED 4.229988
AFN 73.146945
ALL 96.133079
AMD 434.212947
ANG 2.061819
AOA 1056.200947
ARS 1595.729488
AUD 1.676138
AWG 2.073241
AZN 1.95884
BAM 1.9575
BBD 2.319785
BDT 141.322745
BGN 1.968783
BHD 0.434815
BIF 3421.327021
BMD 1.1518
BND 1.483169
BOB 7.988181
BRL 6.046028
BSD 1.151795
BTN 109.176408
BWP 15.880861
BYN 3.428493
BYR 22575.287657
BZD 2.316392
CAD 1.600253
CDF 2628.988678
CHF 0.919315
CLF 0.02693
CLP 1063.36549
CNY 7.961072
CNH 7.958342
COP 4233.211976
CRC 534.857582
CUC 1.1518
CUP 30.52271
CVE 110.369005
CZK 24.518422
DJF 205.093682
DKK 7.472328
DOP 68.558058
DZD 153.334083
EGP 61.736268
ERN 17.277006
ETB 178.048178
FJD 2.580321
FKP 0.866974
GBP 0.867284
GEL 3.086771
GGP 0.866974
GHS 12.620455
GIP 0.866974
GMD 84.656271
GNF 10098.639609
GTQ 8.815384
GYD 241.106739
HKD 9.021621
HNL 30.579896
HRK 7.535884
HTG 150.976542
HUF 389.090264
IDR 19570.240438
ILS 3.616135
IMP 0.866974
INR 108.896278
IQD 1508.830137
IRR 1512601.862779
ISK 143.606561
JEP 0.866974
JMD 181.293527
JOD 0.816578
JPY 183.86078
KES 149.734428
KGS 100.724635
KHR 4612.886352
KMF 492.970864
KPW 1036.623761
KRW 1744.390407
KWD 0.354775
KYD 0.959846
KZT 556.830884
LAK 25050.648874
LBP 103140.830206
LKR 362.813545
LRD 211.358254
LSL 19.777978
LTL 3.400967
LVL 0.696713
LYD 7.352226
MAD 10.765177
MDL 20.230571
MGA 4800.106597
MKD 61.676346
MMK 2417.436221
MNT 4113.24352
MOP 9.293293
MRU 45.987343
MUR 54.017007
MVR 17.795778
MWK 1997.10857
MXN 20.796407
MYR 4.629663
MZN 73.657744
NAD 19.778236
NGN 1591.99517
NIO 42.386262
NOK 11.212362
NPR 174.665914
NZD 2.005595
OMR 0.442792
PAB 1.151815
PEN 4.012185
PGK 4.977258
PHP 69.977059
PKR 321.451413
PLN 4.279935
PYG 7530.377025
QAR 4.199475
RON 5.097752
RSD 117.405319
RUB 93.874992
RWF 1681.924321
SAR 4.322129
SBD 9.262822
SCR 17.163771
SDG 692.232263
SEK 10.889179
SGD 1.482949
SHP 0.864149
SLE 28.276608
SLL 24152.69076
SOS 658.257439
SRD 43.308822
STD 23839.942611
STN 24.520978
SVC 10.077884
SYP 127.305795
SZL 19.775833
THB 37.764652
TJS 11.005823
TMT 4.031301
TND 3.395971
TOP 2.773258
TRY 51.215473
TTD 7.825763
TWD 36.869937
TZS 2977.40446
UAH 50.484891
UGX 4290.85719
USD 1.1518
UYU 46.623733
UZS 14046.382845
VES 538.960062
VND 30332.663288
VUV 137.508177
WST 3.196803
XAF 656.512961
XAG 0.016275
XAU 0.000254
XCD 3.112798
XCG 2.07583
XDR 0.816616
XOF 656.512961
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.819021
ZAR 19.662788
ZMK 10367.582559
ZMW 21.681643
ZWL 370.879256
  • BCC

    0.2900

    74.72

    +0.39%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    22.685

    -0.18%

  • NGG

    2.0500

    83.97

    +2.44%

  • CMSD

    -0.0790

    22.581

    -0.35%

  • AZN

    6.1250

    194.545

    +3.15%

  • RIO

    2.3180

    88.958

    +2.61%

  • BCE

    0.2150

    25.465

    +0.84%

  • JRI

    0.1900

    11.99

    +1.58%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • BTI

    0.7800

    58.58

    +1.33%

  • BP

    0.5250

    47.205

    +1.11%

  • VOD

    0.2750

    14.765

    +1.86%

  • RELX

    0.8400

    32.81

    +2.56%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1400

    14.55

    -0.96%

  • GSK

    0.5300

    54.37

    +0.97%

Silicon Valley VCs navigate uncertain AI future
Silicon Valley VCs navigate uncertain AI future / Photo: Don MacKinnon - AFP

Silicon Valley VCs navigate uncertain AI future

For Silicon Valley venture capitalists, the world has split into two camps: those with deep enough pockets to invest in artificial intelligence behemoths, and everyone else waiting to see where the AI revolution leads.

Text size:

The generative AI frenzy unleashed by ChatGPT in 2022 has propelled a handful of venture-backed companies to eye-watering valuations.

Leading the pack is OpenAI, which raised $40 billion in its latest funding round at a $300 billion valuation -- unprecedented largesse in Silicon Valley's history.

Other AI giants are following suit. Anthropic now commands a $61.5 billion valuation, while Elon Musk's xAI is reportedly in talks to raise $20 billion at a $120 billion price tag.

The stakes have grown so high that even major venture capital firms -- the same ones that helped birth the internet revolution -- can no longer compete.

Mostly, only the deepest pockets remain in the game: big tech companies, Japan's SoftBank, and Middle Eastern investment funds betting big on a post-fossil fuel future.

"There's a really clear split between the haves and the have-nots," says Emily Zheng, senior analyst at PitchBook, told AFP at the Web Summit in Vancouver.

"Even though the top-line figures are very high, it's not necessarily representative of venture overall, because there's just a few elite startups and a lot of them happen to be AI."

Given Silicon Valley's confidence that AI represents an era-defining shift, venture capitalists face a crucial challenge: finding viable opportunities in an excruciatingly expensive market that is rife with disruption.

Simon Wu of Cathay Innovation sees clear customer demand for AI improvements, even if most spending flows to the biggest players.

"AI across the board, if you're selling a product that makes you more efficient, that's flying off the shelves," Wu explained. "People will find money to spend on OpenAI" and the big players.

The real challenge, according to Andy McLoughlin, managing partner at San Francisco-based Uncork Capital, is determining "where the opportunities are against the mega platforms."

"If you're OpenAI or Anthropic, the amount that you can do is huge. So where are the places that those companies cannot play?"

Finding that answer isn't easy. In an industry where large language models behind ChatGPT, Claude and Google's Gemini seem to have limitless potential, everything moves at breakneck speed.

AI giants including Google, Microsoft, and Amazon are releasing tools and products at a furious pace.

ChatGPT and its rivals now handle search, translation, and coding all within one chatbot -- raising doubts among investors about what new ideas could possibly survive the competition.

Generative AI has also democratized software development, allowing non-professionals to code new applications from simple prompts. This completely disrupts traditional startup organization models.

"Every day I think, what am I going to wake up to today in terms of something that has changed or (was) announced geopolitically or within our world as tech investors," reflected Christine Tsai, founding partner and CEO at 500 Global.

- The 'moat' problem -

In Silicon Valley parlance, companies are struggling to find a "moat" -- that unique feature or breakthrough like Microsoft Windows in the 1990s or Google Search in the 2000s that's so successful it takes competitors years to catch up, if ever.

When it comes to business software, AI is "shaking up the topology of what makes sense and what's investable," noted Brett Gibson, managing partner at Initialized Capital.

The risks seem particularly acute given that generative AI's economics remain unproven. Even the biggest players see a very uncertain path to profitability given the massive sums involved.

The huge valuations for OpenAI and others are causing "a lot of squinting of the eyes, with people wondering 'is this really going to replace labor costs'" at the levels needed to justify the investments, Wu observed.

Despite AI's importance, "I think everyone's starting to see how this might fall short of the magical" even if its early days, he added.

Still, only the rare contrarians believe generative AI isn't here to stay.

In five years, "we won't be talking about AI the same way we're talking about it now, the same way we don't talk about mobile or cloud," predicted McLoughlin.

"It'll become a fabric of how everything gets built."

But who will be building remains an open question.

(S.G.Stein--BBZ)