Here’s the quick answer: Venture capital in early 2026 keeps booming, especially in AI and deep tech. Record-shattering mega-rounds are dominating headlines—from Waymo’s eye-popping $16 billion raise to Anthropic nearing a $20 billion round. Investment money is pouring into AI startup infrastructure, robotics, and even defense and space. At the same time, venture funds are consolidating, new players are emerging, and geographic strategies are shifting. Let’s unpack what’s happening now in VC.
January and early February 2026 have already shattered funding records. Waymo alone raised a staggering $16 billion, valuing the company at $126 billion—making it one of the richest private tech firms globally. That single round accounted for the lion’s share of the $18.5 billion raised across seven major deals in that week.
In parallel, Cerebras secured $1 billion for AI chips, while Bedrock Robotics pulled in $270 million for robotics models. These rounds reflect a broader shift: VCs are increasingly betting on AI infrastructure and hardware, not just software.
January continued the frenzy. Crunchbase reports global venture funding for the month hit $55 billion—more than double over January 2025—and U.S. companies received $38.7 billion of that. A remarkable 74% of January’s funding was tied to mega-rounds, with 57% going directly to AI companies.
A sharp split is emerging between AI-fueled growth and everything else. As one VC bluntly put it: “It will be very difficult for a SaaS company without native AI/agentic capabilities to find VC dollars at any stage.”
Crunchbase data confirms that 2025 saw a 30% year-over-year jump in global venture funding, reaching $425 billion. AI dominated the surge—companies like OpenAI, Anthropic, and xAI collectively raised $84 billion, accounting for one-fifth of all VC funding last year.
Further sector breakdowns show AI commanding roughly half of all startup funding in 2025, with healthcare/biotech and financial services following behind.
KPMG’s Q3 2025 report echoes this, citing $120 billion in global VC investment—fourth straight quarter above $100 billion—with AI and defense tech as front-runners.
Analysts expect this trajectory to hold firm into 2026. Deals are becoming fewer but bigger. Exit activity has rebounded, and IPOs are reentering the market, offering liquidity for investors and reinvestment momentum.
North Carolina saw a notable 40% drop in VC funding in 2025, largely due to Epic Games not raising capital. Still, regionally, the state’s startup ecosystem remains above 2015 levels, particularly in biotech and software.
In Europe, VC investment hit a post-pandemic high of €66 billion in 2025, driven largely by AI and defense startups. AI secured over €23.5 billion across the region, while defense tech shot up 55% to $8.7 billion.
A new firm, Sentinel Global—founded by seasoned VCs behind DoorDash, Zoom, and Uber—is betting that the next wave of billion-dollar startups won’t come from Silicon Valley. They plan to focus on AI, infrastructure, and global commerce, with fewer than 10 investments a year but deeper engagement.
Meta-funds continue to shape the market. Andreessen Horowitz raised $15 billion in early 2026—almost one-fifth of all U.S. VC capital deployed in 2025. That money is earmarked across growth, infrastructure, “American Dynamism,” biotech, and more.
Meanwhile, Basis Set Ventures, known for early-stage AI bets, now manages $850 million as of early 2026, showing the rising clout of focused, specialized firms.
Biotech also stands out—Aerska Therapeutics secured new funding to develop brain shuttle molecules for treating neurological disorders.
In India, Niti Aayog’s VK Saraswat urged increased VC support for defense startups, underscoring growing alignment between private capital and national defense innovation.
U.K.’s venture-capital trusts (VCTs) are seeing a surge in demand ahead of an April reduction in tax relief—from 30% to 20%. While tax benefits are still attractive, managers caution that sustainable returns depend on selecting high-quality funds.
AI and deep-tech infrastructure are leading the surge. Unprecedented mega-rounds and concentrated capital flows to frontier technology are the prime drivers.
Yes, sectors like biotech, defense, and climate tech are still attracting capital. But they pale in comparison to AI’s scale and momentum for funding.
Yes. Firms like a16z, with massive war chests, are gaining even greater influence, making competition steeper for smaller or specialized firms.
While the U.S. still dominates, regions like Europe are capturing larger shares, especially in AI and defense. Meanwhile, emerging markets and secondary U.S. hubs are gaining relevance.
Yes, IPO activity is picking up in both the U.S. and China, and anticipated listings (like SpaceX and others) could fuel reinvestment cycles.
In closing, venture capital in 2026 is all about scale, AI-first strategies, and reshaped terrain. The firms and founders that align with AI infrastructure, deep tech, or strategic regional moves are winning. For others, the path is getting narrower—but opportunities remain for those with innovative, defensible plays and clear value.
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