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by ryporter 3760 days ago
The Mike Volpi quote is curious:

“Right now, we don’t really know what things are worth...When you don’t know what something’s worth, you don’t know whether you are getting a good deal or a bad deal, so the obvious thing to do is, not much.”

When you invest in startups (with the exception of late-stage, pre-IPO investing) you never really know what things are worth. The business model of VCs is to make a bunch of high-risk bets, most of which will fail, in order to get a couple of big winners. What's really happening is that VCs aren't willing to invest at valuations that companies expect based on recent history. This is similar to housing bust, when home owners refused to sell because they continued to believe that their homes were worth what they were before the financial crisis.

1 comments

Came here to say this. It's a copout. They didn't know what things are worth a year ago either, particularly early stage cos.