Close Menu
Alpha Leaders
  • Home
  • News
  • Leadership
  • Entrepreneurs
  • Business
  • Living
  • Innovation
  • More
    • Money & Finance
    • Web Stories
    • Global
    • Press Release
What's On
Digital Storage Was The Star At The 2026 NAB Show

Digital Storage Was The Star At The 2026 NAB Show

22 April 2026
FBI looks into dead or missing nuclear and space defense scientists

FBI looks into dead or missing nuclear and space defense scientists

22 April 2026
This Unhackable Quantum Navigation System Is The Size Of A Loaf Of Bread

This Unhackable Quantum Navigation System Is The Size Of A Loaf Of Bread

22 April 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Alpha Leaders
newsletter
  • Home
  • News
  • Leadership
  • Entrepreneurs
  • Business
  • Living
  • Innovation
  • More
    • Money & Finance
    • Web Stories
    • Global
    • Press Release
Alpha Leaders
Home » General Catalyst Rewrites The VC Playbook As Software Buyouts Collapse
Innovation

General Catalyst Rewrites The VC Playbook As Software Buyouts Collapse

Press RoomBy Press Room21 April 20265 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Copy Link Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email WhatsApp
General Catalyst Rewrites The VC Playbook As Software Buyouts Collapse

General Catalyst (GC) just published its first-ever quarterly investor letter, and the headline figure is not the $380 billion valuation Anthropic fetched in its Series G; it is the state of an entire asset class. CEO Hemant Taneja argues that software buyouts structured around terminal value, rather than cash flow, are now delivering negative returns even when the underlying business performs. The firm is betting $43 billion in AUM that the next era of private markets looks nothing like the last.

The quarterly review, signed by Taneja, and published April 21, lands at a moment of maximum stress for growth-stage software investors. Public software multiples have compressed to roughly 12.7x EBITDA, compared to the 25x entry multiples that characterized 2019–2021 buyouts, destroying equity value even in businesses that grew EBITDA by 50%. Taneja runs the math explicitly: a hypothetical deal entering at 25x EBITDA, with the business performing, still returns 0.68x MOIC and a negative 7% IRR when multiples revert to current levels. The business succeeded but the investment model failed.

The GC portfolio is not protected from this dynamic, but Taneja is positioning it as the exception. The firm participated in Anthropic’s Series G, one of the largest venture rounds in history, at a $380 billion valuation, up from the $61.5 billion at which GC first invested in March 2025. That 6x markup in twelve months makes the round one of the best-performing venture bets in the asset class. Anthropic’s annualized revenue run rate grew from $1 billion to over $20 billion in fifteen months, a scaling trajectory GC acknowledges has no precedent.

More structurally significant than any single investment is what GC calls its Customer Value Fund (CVF), which this quarter became, by the firm’s own account , the first venture vehicle ever to achieve an investment-grade credit rating. BBB or higher now covers roughly two-thirds of CVF’s capital. Apollo Global Management which oversees nearly $800 billion in investment-grade credit strategies that venture has historically been unable to touch, because LP structures carry no defined duration. CVF was designed to bridge that gap, and the rating means GC can now bring that capital to bear for its companies without betting on exit multiples.

The geographic ambition is equally large. In February, GC announced a $5 billion commitment to India over five years, which Taneja frames as one of the largest single-country investment commitments ever made by a venture firm. The logic is compounding: India’s UPI now processes more transactions than Visa and Mastercard combined; Aadhaar is the world’s largest biometric identity system; and one million young people enter the workforce every month. The constraint, per Taneja, is not infrastructure or capital, it is the absence of AI-native companies built to leverage both.

The SaaS disruption thesis running through the letter is a major bet. GC cites a portfolio company that eliminated five SaaS providers by rebuilding functionality in-house, saving $8 million annually. Taneja draws a line between two categories of software that will survive the transition: point solutions built around headcount growth, which are structurally impaired; and deeply embedded platforms sitting on proprietary operational data, the healthcare system with ten million patient cases, the financial institution with full-cycle default data, where AI amplifies the moat rather than commoditizing it. Stripe’s $1.9 trillion in 2025 payment volume is the archetype.

Inside GC, an operating company called Percepta is doing applied AI research that the letter publishes in full. The team’s Q1 finding: a WebAssembly interpreter can be implemented inside transformer weights, enabling a language model to execute arbitrary C code internally rather than delegating to an external tool. The key technical unlock is a decoding path that turns attention lookups from linear scans into logarithmic-time queries, generating execution traces at more than 30,000 tokens per second on a CPU. The system solved Arto Inkala’s Sudoku, widely cited as the hardest in the world, in under three minutes. The implication for enterprise AI deployment, per GC, is a path toward systems that can both reason flexibly and compute reliably inside a single inference loop.

Taneja’s most operationally unusual bet remains the acquisition of Summa Health, a hospital in Akron, Ohio; the first time a venture capital firm has purchased a hospital outright. The move is framed as partnership: the firm hired former healthcare CEOs including Ken Frazier and Kate Walsh to run alongside tech-native investors. Taneja argues explicitly that legacy institutions are not obstacles but partners, and that the industries most in need of transformation are governed by people with decades of knowledge that venture does not have.

For investors and founders, the GC letter maps a interesting, new VC blueprint. The buyout firms that entered software at 25 to 50x free cash flow are facing a category repriced underneath them, with no obvious exit: strategic acquirers are managing their own AI transitions, and the public markets for sub-$10 billion companies have effectively closed. The firms that entered at 10x on a cash-flow thesis, or that have built vehicles like CVF to generate returns without terminal value dependency, is advantaged. The question for every software investor is now Taneja’s: if software is abundant, what is actually scarce? His answer: institutional trust, deep customer relationships, operational knowledge that compounds with increasing cognition, is not an abstraction. It is the investment thesis GC is betting $43 billion on.

VC
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Copy Link

Related Articles

Digital Storage Was The Star At The 2026 NAB Show

Digital Storage Was The Star At The 2026 NAB Show

22 April 2026
This Unhackable Quantum Navigation System Is The Size Of A Loaf Of Bread

This Unhackable Quantum Navigation System Is The Size Of A Loaf Of Bread

22 April 2026
The 5 Biggest Problems With ‘Outlander’ Season 8

The 5 Biggest Problems With ‘Outlander’ Season 8

22 April 2026
Your Work Habits May Be AI’s Next Big Dataset

Your Work Habits May Be AI’s Next Big Dataset

22 April 2026
Hints, Answers And Walkthrough For Wednesday, April 22

Hints, Answers And Walkthrough For Wednesday, April 22

22 April 2026
Today’s Wordle #1768 Hints And Answer For Wednesday, April 22

Today’s Wordle #1768 Hints And Answer For Wednesday, April 22

21 April 2026
Don't Miss
Unwrap Christmas Sustainably: How To Handle Gifts You Don’t Want

Unwrap Christmas Sustainably: How To Handle Gifts You Don’t Want

By Press Room27 December 2024

Every year, millions of people unwrap Christmas gifts that they do not love, need, or…

Walmart dominated, while Target spiraled: the winners and losers of retail in 2024

Walmart dominated, while Target spiraled: the winners and losers of retail in 2024

30 December 2024
Moltbook is the talk of Silicon Valley. But the furor is eerily reminiscent of a 2017 Facebook research experiment

Moltbook is the talk of Silicon Valley. But the furor is eerily reminiscent of a 2017 Facebook research experiment

6 February 2026
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Latest Articles
The 5 Biggest Problems With ‘Outlander’ Season 8

The 5 Biggest Problems With ‘Outlander’ Season 8

22 April 20262 Views
Investors are valuing Polymarket at a discount to Kalshi—and its crypto ties could be one reason why

Investors are valuing Polymarket at a discount to Kalshi—and its crypto ties could be one reason why

22 April 20261 Views
Your Work Habits May Be AI’s Next Big Dataset

Your Work Habits May Be AI’s Next Big Dataset

22 April 20262 Views
This Sequoia partner thinks AI-enabled services are the new software. Here’s why

This Sequoia partner thinks AI-enabled services are the new software. Here’s why

22 April 20262 Views

Recent Posts

  • Digital Storage Was The Star At The 2026 NAB Show
  • FBI looks into dead or missing nuclear and space defense scientists
  • This Unhackable Quantum Navigation System Is The Size Of A Loaf Of Bread
  • Feud between AI power startup Fermi and fired CEO and top shareholder heats up over proposed sale
  • The 5 Biggest Problems With ‘Outlander’ Season 8

Recent Comments

No comments to show.
About Us
About Us

Alpha Leaders is your one-stop website for the latest Entrepreneurs and Leaders news and updates, follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
Our Picks
Digital Storage Was The Star At The 2026 NAB Show

Digital Storage Was The Star At The 2026 NAB Show

22 April 2026
FBI looks into dead or missing nuclear and space defense scientists

FBI looks into dead or missing nuclear and space defense scientists

22 April 2026
This Unhackable Quantum Navigation System Is The Size Of A Loaf Of Bread

This Unhackable Quantum Navigation System Is The Size Of A Loaf Of Bread

22 April 2026
Most Popular
Feud between AI power startup Fermi and fired CEO and top shareholder heats up over proposed sale

Feud between AI power startup Fermi and fired CEO and top shareholder heats up over proposed sale

22 April 20264 Views
The 5 Biggest Problems With ‘Outlander’ Season 8

The 5 Biggest Problems With ‘Outlander’ Season 8

22 April 20262 Views
Investors are valuing Polymarket at a discount to Kalshi—and its crypto ties could be one reason why

Investors are valuing Polymarket at a discount to Kalshi—and its crypto ties could be one reason why

22 April 20261 Views

Archives

  • April 2026
  • March 2026
  • February 2026
  • January 2026
  • December 2025
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • December 2024
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • September 2024
  • August 2024
  • July 2024
  • June 2024
  • May 2024
  • April 2024
  • March 2024
  • February 2024
  • January 2024
  • December 2023
  • March 2022
  • January 2021
  • March 2020
  • January 2020

Categories

  • Blog
  • Business
  • Entrepreneurs
  • Global
  • Innovation
  • Leadership
  • Living
  • Money & Finance
  • News
  • Press Release
© 2026 Alpha Leaders. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.