Mercorâs Brendan Foody calls out Sequoia, accusing it of âdual-pricingâ valuation tricks
In recent days, founders and founders-turned-investors took to X to share horror stories about being mistreated by VCs. Their complaints ranged from VCs falling asleep
In recent days, founders and founders-turned-investors took to X to share horror stories about being mistreated by VCs. Their complaints ranged from VCs falling asleep during pitch meetings to investors suggesting a founder fire a co-founder. Brendan Foody, co-founder of the AI talent platform Mercor, which was last valued at $10 billion, went so far as to call out Sequoia, arguably one of the most elite VC firms in the world. âThe âsequoia scamâ is worse than a single horror story,â Foody wrote on X. âin the last 6 [months] ive seen a half dozen rounds where sequoia invests in 2 tranches. everyone pretends they only did the higher valuation. founders misrepresent this to their employees & then shop it to angels too.â TechCrunch has previously reported on VCs investing in the same round at different valuations. Under this mechanism, the lead VC firm invests a significant chunk of its capital at a lower, preferential valuation, while putting a much smaller portion of capital in at a drastically higher price. The massive âheadlineâ valuation that gets announced manufactures the perception of a dominant market winner, masking the fact that the lead investorâs actual average entry price was significantly lower. The disparity can be stark. For example, when the AI-driven IT helpdesk startup Serval announced a $75 million Series B at a $1 billion valuation led by Sequoia, the announcement didnât tell the whole story, according to The Wall Street Journal.
Days earlier, said the Journal, the company had been valued at less than $400 million as part of a Series A extension in which Sequoia participated â less than half the headline figure. The gap between those two numbers is the gap between perception and reality that Foody is pointing at. Serval isnât alone. At Aaru, a startup that uses AI to simulate user behavior for market research, lead investor Redpoint backed the company at a $450 million valuation despite an announced $1 billion headline price. Sequoiaâs Shaun Maguire pushed back on Foodyâs characterization directly. âTBH I have seen some of this behavior but I think itâs unfair to call it the âSequoia scam,ââ Maguire wrote in response to Foody on X. âThis has happened approximately five times during my seven years at Sequoia. What happens is other investors are willing to pay a high price for a hot company â usually AI â at multiples above what weâre willing to pay. So we try to decouple the company-building relationship with our partner from the capital, and this leads to two tranches at different valuations in close succession. âIâm not aware of anything shady here,â Maguire continued, âbut if youâve seen it Iâd love to know. VC is a repeated game, so it just doesnât make sense for us to try to mislead people. And if anyone has, Iâd love to know. And in general, congrats on the success of Mercor â it was a miss for us.â Maguireâs response frames the practice as a market reality rather than a deliberate maneuver â Sequoia, he suggests, is simply unwilling to pay what competitors will pay for the hottest deals, so it structures its participation differently.
