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Khosla Ventures

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Khosla Ventures
Company typePrivate
IndustryVenture capital
Founded2004; 20 years ago (2004)
FounderVinod Khosla
HeadquartersMenlo Park, California, U.S.
ProductsInvestments
Total assets$15 billion (October 2021)
Websitekhoslaventures.com

Khosla Ventures is a private American venture capital firm based in Menlo Park, California. It was founded by entrepreneur Vinod Khosla in 2004.

The firm works with early-stage companies in the Internet, computing, mobile technology, artificial intelligence, financial services, agriculture, healthcare and clean technology sectors. It is known for making early capital investments in startups such as Impossible Foods, Instacart, Affirm, DoorDash, Square and OpenAI.[1]

History

The firm was founded in 2004 by Vinod Khosla, a former general partner of Kleiner Perkins.[2] Khosla Ventures's first two investment vehicles were funded with his own personal capital and were not open to institutional investors.[3]

Khosla Ventures Fund III secured $1 billion to invest in traditional early stage and growth stage companies. Khosla also raised $300 million for Khosla Seed, which would invest in higher-risk opportunities and science experiments.[4] By 2013, the company was considered one of the top investors in clean technology and had invested in more than 70 companies in the sector.[5] As of October 2015, Khosla Ventures was one of the five largest and most active investors in the space sector.[6]

In September 2017, Khosla Ventures had about $5 billion in assets under management.[7]

In October 2021, Khosla Ventures announced that it had raised $1.4 billion in funding to invest in early-to-late stage startups, breaking down to $400 million for seed deals and $1 billion for later-stage companies.[8]

In January 2022, Khosla Ventures raised $557 million in its first opportunity fund.[9]

The firm ranked first in the "Founder's Choice VC" list of more than 200 venture capital firms in 2023.[10]

The firm closed $3.1 billion in new capital across three funds as of November 2023 including $1 billion for later-stage companies, $500 million for seed-stage companies and $1.6 billion for its eighth flagship fund. It was the largest fundraiser by a venture capital firm that year. Khosla Ventures stated that the funding would be used for nuclear fusion, humanoid robots and artificial intelligence to support industries such as healthcare and transportation.[11]

In February 2024, Keith Rabois returned to the firm as a managing director.[12]

Notable investments

Khosla Ventures invests in companies in areas such as artificial intelligence, climate, sustainability, enterprise, consumer, financial technology, digital health, medical technology and diagnostics, therapeutics and frontier technology.

Khosla Ventures invested in DoorDash in 2013 before the company went public in 2020 with a $72 billion valuation. The firm also invested in Instacart in 2012 as part of the seed round before going public in 2020 with $11 billion in market capital. Other consumer investments include Opendoor.[13]

The firm invested in Okta in Series B funding in 2011 before going public in 2017 and GitLab in Series A funding in 2015 before going public in 2021 with in $15 billion market capital. Other enterprise investments include Cylance, Rubrik, Nutanix, and Replit.[14][15][16]

Khosla Ventures invested in Block, Inc.'s Series A funding round in 2009 before the company went public in 2015.[17] The firm also invested Affirm in its Series A round in 2013 before going public in 2021 with a $24 billion valuation.[18] Other fintech investments include Stripe, Upstart, and Ramp.[19]

Khosla Ventures invested in Commonwealth Fusion's $115 million Series A funding round in 2019.[20] Khosla was also an early investor in QuantumScape which went public in 2020.[21] Other sustainability investments include Fortera, LanzaTech and Verdagy.

The firm invested in Guardant Health's Series B funding round in 2014 before going public in 2018 and Alivecor in 2012.[22] Other health investments include Headspace, Oscar, and Sword Health.

Khosla Ventures was the first venture capital firm to invest in OpenAI in 2018.[23] The firm also invested in Rocket Lab's Series A funding round in 2013 before going public in 2021.[24] Other frontier investments include Glydways, Hermeus, Opentrons, and Varda.

Programs and partnerships

In February 2021, Khosla Ventures filed plans for the public offerings of three special-purpose acquisition companies (SPAC), which intend to raise a total of $1.2 billion for the purpose of acquiring and taking public three private companies.[25]

Through a Khosla-backed SPAC, Nextdoor, trading under the ticker KIND, had its initial public offering in November 2021 with a $4.3 billion valuation. By August 2023 KIND's market cap had fallen to about $810 million.[26] Khosla Ventures Acquisition Co. announced that it would close business in December 2023.[27]

References

  1. ^ Lacy, Sarah (July 3, 2009). "Vinod Khosla, Risk Junkie". TechCrunch.
  2. ^ "Khosla Ventures Founder Vinod Khosla Joins Slush 2017 - Slush 2017". Slush 2017. 2017-11-28. Retrieved 2018-01-07.
  3. ^ Marshall, Matt (3 March 2009). "Pierre Lamond, the VC who scared the YouTube guys, joins Khosla". VentureBeat. Retrieved 8 January 2011.
  4. ^ Khosla Ventures piles up $1 billion for green tech. cnet news, September 1, 2009
  5. ^ "Venture capital firm embraces green technology". NYT.
  6. ^ Nordrum, Amy (2015-10-09). "Space Advocate Makes Business Case For Private Company Exploration Of Extraterrestrial Resources". International Business Times. Retrieved 2015-10-10.
  7. ^ Kolodny, Lora (2017-09-07). "Khosla Ventures adds women to investment team — Simmons and Gulati". www.cnbc.com. Retrieved 2018-12-18.
  8. ^ Cheng, Candy. "Khosla Ventures has raised a new $1.4 billion fund to back startup winners like DoorDash, Stripe, and Square". Business Insider. Archived from the original on October 26, 2021. Retrieved November 16, 2021.
  9. ^ Exclusive: Khosla Ventures raises its first opportunities fund
  10. ^ "Founder's Choice VC Leaderboard".
  11. ^ Jin, Berber (14 November 2024). "Early OpenAI Investor Khosla Ventures Closes In on $3 Billion for Venture Funds". WSJ.com.
  12. ^ Konrad, Alex (9 January 2024). "Keith Rabois Makes A Surprise Return To Khosla Ventures, Five Years After Joining Founders Fund". Forbes.com.
  13. ^ Saul, Derek. "Here Are The Big Investor Winners In Instacart's $11 BIllion IPO Debut—And The Losers". Forbes.
  14. ^ New Billionaire: Todd McKinnon's Cloud Security Company Is Booming As More Americans Work From Home
  15. ^ Ringcentral Net Worth 2011-2021
  16. ^ "gitlab-reaches-15-bil-market-cap-as-shares-jump-in-ipo". Forbes.
  17. ^ Taylor, Harriet. "On paper, Khosla's firm could net a massive return on Square IPO". CNBC.
  18. ^ "Affirm Holdings prices U.S. IPO above target range, raises $1.2 billion". Reuters. 12 January 2021.
  19. ^ Khosla Ventures has raised a new $1.4 billion fund to back startup winners like DoorDash, Stripe, and Square
  20. ^ "Commonwealth Fusion Systems Raises $115M in Series A Funding". Finsmes.
  21. ^ Jones, Benji. "Billionaire investor Vinod Khosla shares the 4 most promising sectors he's betting on in the booming climate-tech industry". Business insider.
  22. ^ "Guardant Health Announces $30 Million Series B Financing Led By Khosla Ventures". PRnewswire.
  23. ^ "Vinod Khosla details how much his venture firm had on the line before Sam Altman's reinstatement at OpenAI". Fortune.
  24. ^ Sheetz, Michael. "Khosla Ventures $28 million investment in Rocket Lab is now worth about $1.7 billion". CNBC.
  25. ^ Schubarth, Cromwell (13 February 2021). "Khosla Ventures gets into the SPAC boom with plans to raise $1.2B in 3 IPOs". Silicon Valley Business Journal. Retrieved 9 March 2021.
  26. ^ "Nextdoor Holdings, Inc. (KIND)". finance.yahoo.com.
  27. ^ "Khosla Ventures Acquisition Co. Announces Redemption of Public Shares and Subsequent Dissolution". PR Newswire. 4 December 2023.