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Silicon Valley VCs navigate uncertain AI future

Simon Osuji by Simon Osuji
June 1, 2025
in Artificial Intelligence
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Silicon Valley VCs navigate uncertain AI future
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CEO and founder of Web Summit Paddy Cosgrave speaks at the opening of the Web Summit Vancouver 2025 tech conference
CEO and founder of Web Summit Paddy Cosgrave speaks at the opening of the Web Summit Vancouver 2025 tech conference.

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.

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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 largess 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.

© 2025 AFP

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Silicon Valley VCs navigate uncertain AI future (2025, June 1)
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