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The venture capital industry is not a balanced market where returns are evenly distributed. Returns are concentrated among a handful of elite firms. For most other investors and LPs, the model is unsustainable due to high entry valuations and a low probability of success, leading to wasted capital.

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Market dynamics, particularly from accelerators setting high valuation floors, are forcing VCs into a precarious position. They are applying pricing models suited for massive, power-law outcomes to companies in mid-tier markets. This mismatch between price and potential creates a portfolio strategy that is mathematically unsound.

During hype cycles, massive venture funding allows startups to offer products below cost to capture market share. If the company fails to achieve a high-value exit, the Limited Partner's capital has effectively been transferred to consumers in the form of discounts, without generating a financial return for the investors.

LPs are concentrating capital into a few trusted mega-firms, leading to oversubscribed rounds for top players. Simultaneously, a decline in deal formation and liquidity is causing a potential 30-50% "extinction rate" for smaller, emerging managers who are unable to raise subsequent funds.

Despite median venture capital funds lagging public indexes like the S&P 500 for a quarter-century, capital continues to pour into the asset class. One LP describes this as 'hope over experience,' as investors are lured by the outlier returns of top funds, even though the average dollar invested underperforms.

Aggregate venture capital investment figures are misleading. The market is becoming bimodal: a handful of elite AI companies absorb a disproportionate share of capital, while the vast majority of other startups, including 900+ unicorns, face a tougher fundraising and exit environment.

Botha argues venture capital isn't a scalable asset class. Despite massive capital inflows (~$250B/year), the number of significant ($1B+) exits hasn't increased from ~20 per year. The math for industry-wide returns doesn't work, making it a "return-free risk" for many LPs.

The venture capital landscape is bifurcating. Large, multi-stage funds leverage scale and network, while small, boutique funds win with deep domain expertise. Mid-sized generalist funds lack a clear competitive edge and risk getting squeezed out by these two dominant models.

The venture capital return model has shifted so dramatically that even some multi-billion-dollar exits are insufficient. This forces VCs to screen for 'immortal' founders capable of building $10B+ companies from inception, making traditionally solid businesses run by 'mortal founders' increasingly uninvestable by top funds.

Seed funds that primarily act as a supply chain for Series A investors—optimizing for quick markups rather than fundamental value—are failing. This 'factory model' pushes them into the hyper-competitive 'white hot center' of the market, where deals are priced to perfection and outlier returns are rare.

The majority of venture capital funds fail to return capital, with a 60% loss-making base rate. This highlights that VC is a power-law-driven asset class. The key to success is not picking consistently good funds, but ensuring access to the tiny fraction of funds that generate extraordinary, outlier returns.