AI News: AI Dominates Capital Allocation as $50M+ Funding Falls Far Below 2021 Boom
AI Absorbs the Lion’s Share of Large-Scale FundingGlobal markets saw a renewed surge in fundraising activity last year, but the structure of capital deployment has fundamentally changed. While innovation funding remains robust, money is flowing into fewer companies, led decisively by artificial intelligence (AI).Data shows that funding rounds of $50 million or more totaled roughly $300 billion, sharply below the $500+ billion peak reached during the 2021 venture boom. Despite improved sentiment, mega-round activity has not returned to pandemic-era extremes.The contraction is even clearer on the company level. The number of startups raising at least $50 million fell to around 1,440, roughly half the number seen at the height of the 2021 cycle.Private Equity Retreats as Crossover Capital Pulls BackAccording to Crunchbase, the investor mix behind mega-rounds has shifted dramatically.In 2021, private equity and crossover funds dominated large financings as global venture funding surged to $702 billion, fueled by digital acceleration and ultra-loose monetary policy. Firms such as Tiger Global Management and SoftBank Vision Fund led the market in both deal count and capital deployed.That dominance has since faded:Tiger Global and SoftBank have reduced participation in $50M+ rounds by more than 95% compared with 2021Other major crossover players—including Insight Partners, Coatue, Temasek, and General Atlantic—saw deal counts drop by up to 75%Private equity remains active, but no longer sets the pace in large venture financingsThis pullback reflects a broader reassessment of risk, valuation discipline, and return timelines following the post-2021 correction.Venture Capital Reclaims Leadership in the AI CycleBy 2025, traditional venture capital firms regained control of large deal flow, particularly in AI-related investments.Eight of the ten most active lead investors in $50M+ rounds were core VC firms, led by:General Catalyst – 30 dealsAndreessen Horowitz – 24 dealsLightspeed Venture Partners and Accel – 22 deals eachEven so, today’s activity remains far below historical peaks. The most active firm in 2025 led 30 large rounds, compared with 182 deals by the top investor in 2021.Notably, firms such as Khosla Ventures, New Enterprise Associates, and Google Ventures more than doubled their large-round activity versus 2021, signaling a rotation back to long-term venture specialists rather than fast-moving crossover capital.AI Mega-Rounds Eclipse 2021’s Largest DealsWhile total funding volumes are lower, individual AI financings are significantly larger than anything seen in 2021.In the current cycle:SoftBank Vision Fund led a $40 billion round in OpenAI, the largest private funding deal on recordMeta invested $14.3 billion in Scale AIAnthropic raised $13 billion in a round co-led by Fidelity, Lightspeed, and Iconiq CapitalBy contrast, 2021’s largest deal—Flipkart’s $3.6 billion raise—now looks modest next to today’s AI-driven capital injections.Crunchbase data shows that among the 27 most active investors by dollar volume in 2025:14 were private equity or alternative asset managers9 were venture capital firms4 were strategic corporate investorsThis reflects a more balanced—but far more selective—capital landscape.Fewer Deals, Bigger Bets, AI at the CenterThe data points to a clear conclusion:Capital levels have not returned to 2021’s excessMega-round funding is more concentrated than everAI is absorbing a disproportionate share of global venture dollarsControl has shifted back to Silicon Valley’s core VC firmsRather than a broad-based funding boom, the current cycle is defined by fewer companies, larger checks, and extreme conviction around AI as the primary growth engine of the next decade.In short, this is not a repeat of 2021—it’s a structurally different, AI-led capital cycle.