
Peter Thiel’s Founders Fund has closed a new $6 billion fund, marking the largest raise in the venture capital firm’s history.
The vehicle will focus mainly on late-stage companies as private startups continue to seek large funding rounds outside public markets.
Bloomberg reported that Founders Fund raised $6 billion for a new late-stage investment vehicle, citing people familiar with the matter. The raise marks the firm’s biggest fund haul since its launch two decades ago.
The fund will target more mature startups rather than early-stage companies. That focus places the firm in competition for large private deals at a time when high-growth technology firms are staying private for longer.
Thiel and team commit $1.5 billion
About $4.5 billion of the new fund came from limited partners, including sovereign wealth funds, according to Bloomberg’s report. The remaining $1.5 billion came from Thiel, Founders Fund management, and employees.
That internal commitment may draw attention from investors because it shows that the firm’s own team has capital tied to the fund’s results. Founders Fund has often followed a concentrated investment style, backing fewer companies with larger checks.
Additionally, the new fund is Founders Fund’s fourth growth-stage vehicle. It was raised less than one year after its prior growth fund, marking the fastest fund cycle in the firm’s 20-year history.
The speed of the raise reflects rising demand for late-stage capital. Many private companies now prefer large private rounds over public listings, especially when IPO markets remain selective.
Reports also said the firm’s prior $4.6 billion fund was deployed faster than planned. Founders Fund backed a small number of companies with large checks, including investments tied to artificial intelligence and defense technology.
Venture market favors large funds
The raise adds to a wider trend in venture capital, where large firms continue to attract major commitments while smaller managers face harder fundraising conditions. Investors have shown strong interest in artificial intelligence, defense, infrastructure, and other capital-heavy sectors.
Andreessen Horowitz also raised more than $15 billion across five funds earlier this year, including capital for scaling startups and AI infrastructure. That raise showed that major venture firms are still drawing large pools of capital despite a mixed private market.
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