
Sequoia Capital has raised approximately $7 billion for a new fund, according to Bloomberg, marking its largest fundraise within this category and the first under its new leadership structure.
The capital will be deployed through Sequoia’s “expansion strategy,” its late-stage investment arm focused on the US and Europe. The fund is nearly double the size of the $3.4 billion raised for a comparable vehicle in 2022, reflecting a significant scale-up in its investment approach.
This increase in fund size highlights a broader shift in venture capital, driven by the rapid evolution of artificial intelligence. Late-stage companies in the AI space are now raising capital at unprecedented levels, largely due to the high costs associated with training advanced models and building the infrastructure required to support them.
Sequoia’s investment strategy aligns closely with this trend. The firm has backed leading AI companies such as OpenAI and Anthropic, both of which are reportedly targeting public listings in 2026. It has also invested in emerging players like Physical Intelligence, a robotics startup based in the Bay Area, and Factory, which focuses on building AI agents for enterprise engineering teams.
The scale of this fundraise underscores how venture capital firms are adapting to an environment where late-stage investments demand significantly larger capital commitments, particularly in sectors shaped by AI-driven innovation.




