YC Partners Taggar, Tan And Reddit Co-Founder Ohanian Raise $39M For Initialized Capital

YC Partners Garry Tan and Harj Taggar along with the early-stage firm’s “Ambassador to the East” and Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian have raised $39 million for a separate fund called Initialized Capital, according to an SEC filing today. All three of them have been investing on their own for a couple years and Initialized Capital isn’t formally tied to Y Combinator in any way. It is their own fund. They look for high-quality founders first and then try to see if they can help or understand the market a company is attacking in any way. The fund is open to all companies, regardless of whether they have been part of the Y Combinator program or not. It’s their second fund, following an earlier $7 million one that has backed companies like Zach Verdin’s New Hive. Y Combinator has historically taken a two to 10 percent stake in its companies in exchange for $11,000 plus $3,000 per founder, which is ideally is enough to get a startup to a decent first prototype. The firm sometimes invests more than that. But it historically hasn’t done serious follow-on funding, and has instead left that to the broader community of angels and venture capital firms.
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YC Partners Garry Tan and Harj Taggar along with the early-stage firm’s “Ambassador to the East” and Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian have raised $39 million for a separate fund called Initialized Capital, according to an SEC filing today.

All three of them have been investing on their own for a couple years and Initialized Capital isn’t formally tied to Y Combinator in any way. It is their own fund.

They look for high-quality founders first and then try to see if they can help or understand the market a company is attacking in any way. The fund is open to all companies, regardless of whether they have been part of the Y Combinator program or not.

It’s their second fund, following an earlier $7 million one that has backed companies like Zach Verdin’s New Hive.

Y Combinator has historically taken a two to 10 percent stake in its companies in exchange for $11,000 plus $3,000 per founder, which is ideally is enough to get a startup to a decent first prototype. The firm sometimes invests more than that. But it historically hasn’t done serious follow-on funding, and has instead left that to the broader community of angels and venture capital firms.


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