Silicon Valley VCs Shift From AI Hype to Climate Tech and SaaS Amid Bubble Warnings
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Amid this, firms eye resilient sectors. Pegasus Tech Ventures, a Silicon Valley heavyweight managing over 2 billion dollars, spotlighted C16 Biosciences as winner of the Startup World Cup Agriculture and Food Regional on March 10, advancing it to San Francisco's grand finale for a 1 million dollar prize. The biotech firm ferments palm oil alternatives to combat deforestation and supply risks, serving food, beauty, and care industries. This nod from Pegasus and partners like Serra Ventures underscores a pivot to climate tech and agtech for supply chain stability.
Funding stats reflect caution: AI capex-to-sales ratios could hit 37 percent by 2028, topping dot-com peaks, says Morgan Stanley's Todd Castagno. Layoffs at Oracle and Meta, blamed partly on AI efficiencies, are normalized by Gurley as cash conservation, not apocalypse. No major regulatory shifts dominate headlines, but firms like Andreessen Horowitz stay grounded—cofounder Marc Andreessen skips Silicon Valley's ayahuasca trend, joking it turns founders into surf instructors in Indonesia.
Diversity gets less airtime, but climate and AI strain push VCs toward defensible bets. These trends signal a VC future of pruned AI excesses, revived SaaS, and green tech surges, tempering Silicon Valley's risk appetite for sustainable returns.
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