The India-based VC firm Peak XV is having an exciting few months. A TechCrunch report on Friday laid out the firm’s good news, bragging that it had signed 10 new term sheets and made three exits since it split with the U.S.-based Sequoia Capital in June. By all accounts the firm is thriving, at least by the numbers, and it’s a perfect example of how the global venture capital game is fracturing.
Startup funding is going through the same chaotic decoupling that’s roiling supply chains and semiconductors — and just like hardware, it’s mostly about the rivalry between the U.S. and China. As VCs in the U.S. pour money into the next generation of companies, China hawks in the U.S. government want to make sure those funds aren’t flowing to America’s enemies. At the same time, VCs want to put the money where it will have a chance to grow — and increasingly, that means looking outside the U.S. READ MORE