• D.C.
  • BXL
  • Lagos
  • Dubai
  • Beijing
  • SG
rotating globe
  • D.C.
  • BXL
  • Lagos
Semafor Logo
  • Dubai
  • Beijing
  • SG


Newsletter͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌ 
 
cloudy Palo Alto
cloudy Seattle
cloudy Nassau
rotating globe
November 15, 2022
semafor

Technology

Technology
Sign up for our free newsletters
 
Reed Albergotti
Reed Albergotti

Hi, and welcome to Semafor Tech, a twice-weekly newsletter from Louise Matsakis and me that gives an inside look at the struggle for the future of the tech industry. Today, we have the scoop on Andreessen Horowitz’s crypto returns and details on its (very fortunate) decision to reject FTX. We text with the crypto reporter of the hour — an anonymous Twitter handle called Autism Capital. (You can’t make this stuff up.) And this morning, NASA shot a rocket to the moon for the first time in a half century.

Was this email forwarded to you? Sign up here!

Buy/Sell

Reuters/Amit Dave

➚ Buy: DoorDash. Its delivery workers can now cancel orders from people who are rude and block repeat customers who make them feel unsafe. The move will help protect couriers and shows DoorDash has come a long way since 2019, when it was widely criticized for using workers’ tips to subsidize their wages.

➘ Sell: Amazon. The company is reportedly planning to lay off 10,000 employees, in what would be the biggest job cuts in its history. Meanwhile, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security says drug traffickers are using Amazon to ship bundles of methamphetamine disguised as packages of “ornamental stones,” as well as other similar products.

PostEmail
Semafor Stat

The amount that a federal district court judge ordered the U.S. Department of Commerce to pay Chinese-American hydrologist Sherry Chen last week. The agency is alleged to have falsely accused her of being a spy for Beijing, costing Chen her job at the National Weather Service. Her case is an early example of the U.S. government’s growing scrutiny of Chinese-Americans scientists, reports MIT Technology Review.

PostEmail
Reed Albergotti

Andreessen passed on FTX while venture firm’s early crypto investors are up

THE SCOOP

Venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz turned down opportunities to invest in FTX, the failed exchange that has roiled the crypto market, according to three people with knowledge of the matter.

These people say that FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried, who resigned as CEO last week when his crypto exchange filed for bankruptcy, pitched Andreessen directly on an investment, but the venture capitalist declined in each funding round.

While the FTX meltdown has spread throughout the digital asset industry — contributing to a more than 70% drop in the crypto market’s total value from a year ago to $826 billion — Andreessen’s big bets in the space are still up, according to documents reviewed by Semafor. That’s because it was able to sell a portion of tokens it held as part of its investments before the downturn.

By the first quarter of this year, Andreessen’s first crypto fund, with $356 million in assets under management, had returned nearly five times the initial investment to the backers of that portfolio, according to the documents, which have not been disclosed previously.

Those returns came in the fiat currency known as dollars.

That means that even if all of the firm’s investments in crypto go to zero, the fund’s investors will still get at least five times their initial investment — a successful return.

Andreessen’s “paper” returns, which is what the firm expects to eventually recoup, was marked at nearly 15 times at the beginning of 2022, according to the documents. With the market rout that began earlier this year and now the collapse of FTX, the fund is almost certainly lower than it was at the start of 2022. But it is still on track to be one of the most successful in the firm’s history, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

Andreessen declined to comment.

The firm was already an investor in competing exchange Coinbase when Bankman-Fried pitched Andreessen. While it’s unusual for venture firms to back competitors, one person with knowledge of the matter said that there was hesitancy to invest in FTX, in part because Andreessen partners did not trust Bankman-Fried.

Andreessen never got as far as conducting due diligence on FTX, but the company’s lack of a traditional board of directors and headquarters outside the U.S. would have raised questions, this person said.

Bankman-Fried, an investor in Semafor, and FTX declined to comment.

Marc Andreessen
Reuters/Lucy Nicholson

Andreessen Horowitz was one of the first venture firms to bet big on crypto with its first fund in 2018, led by partners Chris Dixon and Katie Haun. Haun has since left to start her own firm.

Andreessen’s investments in crypto companies like OpenSea and Dapper Labs are not like traditional venture investments. Instead of receiving only shares in the company, it often receives “token rights,” or the ability to purchase any crypto assets produced by the company.

In these deals, Andreessen agrees to hold those tokens for a period of time and is able to sell them at predetermined intervals. Token rights have helped the firm return cash to limited partners like pension funds and endowments, according to people familiar with the matter.

The equity Andreessen holds in its crypto investments may also reap financial returns, albeit on a longer-term horizon. The firm led a $25 million funding round in Coinbase in 2013. That investment paid off, but not until the crypto exchange went public last year at a $100 billion valuation.

REED’S VIEW

Andreessen’s returns show just how quickly and massively the value of cryptocurrencies grew in recent years. Andreessen sold just a small portion of the tokens it accumulated as part of its crypto investment strategy and was able to return five times its entire investment.

What’s even more surprising about these returns is that Andreessen still holds a significant amount of the shares and tokens in these companies, which means investors are still receiving cash payments on those investments years later. If Andreessen had been able to unload even more of its stock at the height of the crypto bubble, the returns could have been many times greater.

The documents I reviewed show that Andreessen still retains a large stake in those investments.

ROOM FOR DISAGREEMENT

Critics of the crypto industry might see this as evidence that Andreessen’s crypto fund isn’t so much venture capital as it is financial speculation.

Andreessen bet on a hot crypto market early and got some of its money out before it crashed. The losers are the retail investors who got in late and didn’t get out soon enough, sacrificing their investments.

The FTX bankruptcy alone could have up to 1 million creditors, reflecting people who lost money and can no longer access their funds.

PostEmail
Text

One Good Text with... Autism Capital

Autism Capital is an anonymous Twitter account with over 140,000 followers that describes itself as “citizen journalism in Crypto.” It first reported many details about the implosion of FTX, which filed for bankruptcy last week.

PostEmail
Evidence

PostEmail
Watchdogs

U.S. officials are talking more about the risks posed by TikTok’s Chinese ownership. FBI Director Christopher Wray told lawmakers Tuesday he was “extremely concerned” about the app and offered to give them a classified briefing about the problems the bureau sees with it. And last week, two Republican lawmakers wrote a column in the Washington Post calling for TikTok to be outright banned. U.S. President Joe Biden is currently weighing a deal with TikTok designed to alleviate potential national security concerns, but a decision has yet to be announced.

Louise

PostEmail
Staff Picks
  • A psychiatrist who worked for the collapsed crypto exchange FTX said he treated about 20 of its employees, prescribing some of them medication. In an interview with Motherboard, George Lerner claimed he also served as an in-house coach, a role that included finding “dating options,” for FTX staff so that they didn’t need to rely on their co-workers for romantic companionship. Earlier this week, Semafor visited the Bahamas resort where FTX is headquartered.
  • The SoftBank-backed mental health startup Cerebral was ill-equipped to treat patients with complicated disorders, and at least a handful of them have overdosed or died, according to Bloomberg. Cerebral, which raised over $400 million from investors, is one of a number of VC-backed mental health platforms that grew rapidly during pandemic lockdowns and later became embroiled in controversy.
  • Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis announced the country was banning the sale of spyware, after Documento, a left-wing newspaper, reported his government had used it to surveil journalists, businessmen, and politicians. A new report from the European Union found the abuse of spyware is a larger problem on the continent that “mercilessly exposes the immaturity and weakness of the EU as a democratic entity.”
PostEmail
Enthusiasms
Artemis rocket on the stand
NASA

It feels like NASA is back. The space agency’s successful launch of Artemis 1 early Wednesday morning marks the beginning of its efforts to send people back to the lunar surface. Later Wednesday, the Orion Spacecraft, which separated from the rocket, ignited its engines to slingshot out of Earth’s orbit toward the moon. In future missions, astronauts will sit in the craft. In roughly 2025, it will land people back on the moon, including the first woman and first African American. NASA plans to use the Artemis program as a stepping stone to Mars.

Reed

PostEmail
How Are We Doing?

Are you enjoying Semafor Tech?

The more people read us, the better we’ll get. So please share it with your family, friends and colleagues to get those network effects rolling.

And hey, we can’t inform you on what’s happening in tech from inside your spam folder. Be sure to add reed.albergotti@semafor.com (you can always reach me by replying to these emails) and lmatsakis@semafor.com to your contacts. In Gmail, drag this newsletter over to your ‘Primary’ tab.

Thanks for reading.

Want more Semafor? Explore all our newsletters at semafor.com/newsletters

— Reed and Louise

PostEmail