Author: ADIN
Compilation: Deep Tide TechFlow
Deep Tide's Introduction: a16z manages $60 billion in assets, raised $15 billion this year, while acquiring a media network, obtaining RIA qualification, and building a multi-strategy fund platform—this isn't a conventional VC fundraising round. This is a roadshow rehearsal for an asset management company preparing to go public. Looking at the IPO paths of Blackstone and KKR, a16z could be listed between 2028 and 2030, and the game rules for the entire VC industry will be rewritten.
On January 9, 2026, Ben Horowitz published a blog post titled "Why Are We Here? Why Raise $15 Billion?". On the same day, TechCrunch's headline was "The VC Firm Devouring Silicon Valley Raises Another $15 Billion." On the same day, a16z.news published a 6000-word guest article by Packy McCormick titled "The Power Brokers," positioning a16z as the successor to Michael Ovitz's CAA.
This isn't a fundraising announcement. This is a roadshow.
a16z now manages about $60 billion—more than Apollo's AUM ($67 billion) when it filed its S-1 in 2011, and close to Blackstone's scale before its 2007 IPO. This $15 billion represents over 18% of total US VC investment in 2025. And a year earlier, Marc Andreessen told TechCrunch something almost no other GP would dare say publicly: he wants a16z to become "a durable firm, beyond a partnership."
In VC jargon, "beyond a partnership" has a specific meaning. Partnerships die when founding partners retire. Companies don't. Companies have equity, succession mechanisms, decades-long balance sheets, and—eventually—a path to public markets.
a16z won't file an S-1 next quarter. But it's doing something more interesting: building the narrative infrastructure needed for an IPO years before the listing itself happens. Recent media hires aren't a content strategy. This is preparation.
What "Going Public" Actually Means for a VC Firm
When people hear "VC firm going public," they imagine a fund—like Fund 12—trading on Nasdaq. That's not how it works. It's the management company that goes public. LPs still hold fund shares. Public shareholders hold the GP entity, which collects management fees, carried interest, and balance sheet income from permanent capital pools.
This is precisely the path Blackstone took in June 2007, pricing its IPO at $31, popping 13% on the first day, valuing the company at around $40 billion. KKR followed in 2010. Apollo Global Management filed its 424(b)(4) prospectus in 2011, raising $565 million. Carlyle in 2012. TPG in 2022. Every large publicly listed alternative asset manager went public for the same three reasons:
Permanent capital. Public equity is permanent money. LP funds have 10-year lifespans; public balance sheets do not.
Currency for M&A and talent. Public stock lets you acquire firms, retain talent, incentivize successors.
Brand perpetuity. A ticker symbol outlives its founders.
In February 2025, Axios broke that General Catalyst was exploring an IPO—no bankers hired, no S-1 filed, just a signal. ADIN itself analyzed this signal three months later in "When Venture Capital Goes Public," showing this isn't a fringe idea within the industry. For any VC firm large enough, it's the next obvious move.
a16z is the only one large enough to plausibly sustain a listing.
The Unspoken Structural Shifts
A VC IPO requires three things most firms don't have:
1. RIA qualification. In 2019, a16z shifted from an exempt reporting adviser to a fully registered investment adviser. Most VCs don't do this—RIA status brings burdensome compliance, custody rules, and disclosure obligations. a16z absorbed these costs years ago. Why? Because RIA qualification lets the firm hold public stocks, hold cryptocurrencies, hold secondary shares, hold balance sheet positions—exactly what you want on the balance sheet of a public asset manager.
2. Multi-strategy offerings. Apollo, Blackstone, KKR were all multi-strategy platforms at IPO—buyouts, credit, real estate, infrastructure. a16z's January 2026 raise wasn't one fund. It was seven funds: American Dynamism Fund ($1.176 billion), Applications Fund ($1.7 billion), Bio + Health Fund ($700 million), Infrastructure Fund ($1.5 billion), Crypto Fund, Growth Fund, and Gaming Fund. This is the structure of an alternative asset manager, not a VC firm.
3. Permanent capital pools. a16z's Growth Fund is increasingly looking like a permanent capital pool. Partner David George went on Bloomberg's Odd Lots in February 2026, arguing that private tech companies now represent $5 trillion in market cap—close to 25% of the S&P 500. This isn't podcast banter. This is the argument a post-IPO a16z would use at an investor day to justify a P/E ratio comparable to Blackstone's. Pre-IPO narratives are being A/B tested in real-time on financial podcasts.
If you're in corporate development at Morgan Stanley, you already have this deck.
Why Hire Media People?
This is where it gets interesting.
On April 21, 2025, a16z acquired Erik Torenberg—founder of the Turpentine podcast network—and made him a General Partner. Marc Andreessen wrote in the announcement: "When we started a16z, we decided to do venture capital in a very network- and media-intensive way." Torenberg wrote on his Substack that a16z fully acquired Turpentine.
In November 2025, Torenberg, along with Alex Danco, Brent Liang, and Henry Williams, co-wrote "What Is New Media?" on a16z.news. The framework is clear: a16z is building distribution platforms, not publications. Future (launched 2021) was the prototype. a16z.news is the production layer. Turpentine is the audio layer. Packy McCormick's "The Power Brokers" piece is the flagship long-form article.
Looked at individually, each is a content marketing move. Looked at together, they're owned media infrastructure.
Here's the question nobody's asking: What kind of company needs to own its narrative distribution at this scale?
A private partnership doesn't. A private partnership wins by picking winners. Narrative happens around it.
A public asset management company absolutely needs to own its narrative. Because:
Quarterly earnings calls require a coherent story
Sell-side analysts need a model that doesn't reduce the business to "volatile venture returns"
Retail investors need a brand they understand
The stock price needs narrative liquidity—a steady stream of bullish but credible content to support valuation multiples
The firm needs a counterweight to mainstream financial media, which will be skeptical of any publicly traded VC
This is the CAA analogy Andreessen keeps returning to. Ovitz didn't build CAA as a talent agency. He built it as an agency group with proprietary access to client narratives. a16z is doing the same thing—except a16z is both the agent and the asset itself.
When Packy McCormick wrote "The Power Brokers" to celebrate the $15 billion raise, he wasn't just a friendly columnist. He was effectively playing the role a sell-side research analyst would play post-listing. He was building the bull case in plain language for an audience that needs to digest it in 280-character tweets during an IPO process.
The Torenberg Signal
Torenberg's role is the clearest signal. He doesn't manage funds. He doesn't do company diligence. By his own 2026 Scheming post, he's focused on "building the VC firm as a product."
The phrase "VC firm as a product" only makes sense if you believe the firm itself—not its portfolio—is the asset being built. This is public company language. This is what Stephen Schwarzman has said about Blackstone for two decades. This is what Henry Kravis said about KKR pre-IPO. This is founder pre-IPO mindset.
When a private partnership hires a General Partner whose explicit mandate is to build the firm as a product, the firm has crossed the threshold. It's no longer a partnership pretending to be a company. It's a company pretending to be a partnership—because the partnership form is still useful for fundraising optics and LP comfort.
That gap disappears when the company lists.
The Timeline Question
a16z won't file an S-1 in 2026. The current market backdrop—concentrated mega AI rounds, $189 billion deployed in February alone, three companies absorbing most of it—isn't the market where you IPO a multi-strategy asset manager. You IPO when the AI cycle matures, Growth Fund book values crystallize into realized returns, and at least one comparable firm (maybe General Catalyst) has sell-side coverage.
But the pre-IPO infrastructure is already in place:
RIA qualification: Done (2019)
Multi-strategy platform: Done (January 2026)
Owned media: Done (Future, a16z.news, Turpentine)
Narrative GPs: Done (Torenberg, Danco, Liang)
Pre-IPO storyline: In progress ("private and public markets have converged")
Comparable precedents: Blackstone, Apollo, KKR, Carlyle, TPG, now General Catalyst exploring
The most likely path is 2028–2030, after a clean wave of AI exits, baseline valuation comparable to TPG's $9 billion IPO market cap in 2022, but likely closer to Blackstone's $40 billion first-day valuation in 2007 given a16z's scale and brand premium. Higher in a bull case if David George's "converged markets" thesis becomes mainstream institutional consensus.
What This Means for the Rest of VC
If a16z goes public, the entire industry follows. General Catalyst is already exploring. Sequoia, Lightspeed, and Founders Fund have all built balance sheet vehicles and permanent capital structures over the past five years. The exempt reporting advisor model that defined VC for four decades is being quietly phased out by firms that intend to outlive their founders.
Firms that don't make this transition face a different problem. They'll be price-takers on talent, deal flow, and narrative, competing with their newsletters and Twitter accounts against a16z's owned media platforms.
This is the second-order effect nobody has priced in yet. Media building isn't about content. It's about owning the distribution layer competitors will eventually have to rent from a16z.
In that sense, a16z is already operating as the public company it's becoming. The ticker symbol is just the final form.






