The air still smells of ambition and espresso outside some of the cafés on Sand Hill Road, but the conversations have changed. They are now faster—compressed, as if someone had doubled the speed of the previous venture scripts. After scrolling past a model demo that looks sleek enough to dazzle a room for three minutes, a founder wearing a black hoodie taps a MacBook. An investor nods across the table, already performing the mental acrobatics that transform a story into a figure and a figure into a headline: four billion, give or take.
These days, it’s difficult to ignore how casually those numbers land. In the past, a $4 billion valuation came with some weight—years of painful lessons learned about the go-to-market, at least a hint of revenue, and perhaps a scarred CFO who could explain the burn without blinking. It can now appear on a landing page almost as quickly as a new logo, particularly if the startup is involved in the AI infrastructure story. For example, in late 2025, Fireworks AI announced a $250 million Series C at a $4 billion valuation, positioned as a wager on the generative AI’s inference capabilities and infrastructure.
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Topic focus | The return of hyper-fast startup valuation jumps—especially in AI infrastructure/chips and “frontier” labs |
| Example datapoint | Fireworks AI announced a $250M Series C at a $4B valuation (Oct 2025) (Fireworks AI) |
| Another signal of the moment | TechCrunch reported fal.ai raising at $4B+ valuation (Oct 2025) (TechCrunch) |
| What’s driving it | Scarcity of compute, platform FOMO, mega-funds moving earlier, and the belief that “picks-and-shovels” wins repeat |
| Founder risk to watch | Misaligned incentives: big funds needing grand-slam exits can treat “great outcomes” like rounding errors (insights.euclid.vc) |
| One authentic reference | Fireworks AI’s Series C announcement (Fireworks AI) |
The valley’s collective memory seems to have softened around the edges, as if it is recalling the positive aspects of 2021 and putting the hangover behind it. “Raising $100 million” was a milestone that was discussed for months in that previous world. These days, the price tags sometimes feel more like choreography than discovery, and the milestones blend together. Another indication that “AI picks and shovels” can float swiftly when the market determines it needs more throughput is the fact that TechCrunch reported fal.ai increasing at a $4 billion+ valuation around the same time yesterday.
Naturally, the mood changes from giddy to strange when it comes to the math. A $4 billion valuation suggests more than just optimism; it suggests a particular kind of optimism, one that is predicated on the idea that physics will cooperate, competition will remain civil, and time will behave. Investors appear to think that the company can borrow credibility from the market if it is large enough. However, markets do not sign contracts with customers. Businesses do. Furthermore, supply chains, manufacturing cycles, energy, latency, procurement committees, and the tedious process of integrating with systems that were created when “AI” meant a rules engine in a dusty enterprise folder continue to be painfully analog constraints for many of the most popular AI infrastructure bets, such as chips, inference clouds, and new compute architectures.
At this point, “startup math” appears to have been revived. We all pretended that discipline was taught during the ZIRP era not long ago. Then, subtly, the old strategies reappeared: treat revenue as a future accessory, price the round for the story rather than the spreadsheet, and presume the next round will validate the current one. In a discussion that has been circulating among founders who still harbor a small amount of skepticism, Bill Gurley stated bluntly that the ecosystem begins eliminating small and intermediate results, playing “grand slam” all day, and pretending it hasn’t learned anything.
Under those circumstances, the founder-investor relationship becomes strange—and not in the lively, tenacious way that people imagine. Mega-funds have gotten so big that even with a charming and sincere partner on the other side, their incentives can tilt. Alignment turns into math. A $400M exit—the kind of outcome that can transform a founding team’s life, buy back years of risk, and allow employees to breathe again—may hardly register if an investor needs $10B outcomes to make their fund work. This point has been emphasized by Euclid Insights: large sums of money creeping in earlier can lead to structural misalignment, where “success” for the founder differs from “success” for the cap table.
Some of these $4 billion valuations might hold up well over time. Some will. The unsettling reality is that venture capital has always relied on outliers, and artificial intelligence is generating actual outliers in the form of businesses that scale usage at an astonishing rate, ship products that seem finished right out of the box, and create new demand curves that don’t fit the traditional SaaS playbooks. There is also a logical explanation for the insanity: you might pay more for the person in charge of the switches if you think inference is the new electricity meter.
Whether the current pricing is supporting innovation or a fear of missing the next NVIDIA is still unknown. The room can start to resemble a fantasy league draft with better suits when investors keep saying the same thing: “this could be the next.” The dull questions are no longer asked. How much time will it take to produce? Who are the initial ten clients? When hyperscalers choose to compete, what happens? To what extent is this valuation predicated on the idea that capital will remain accessible?
The founder’s dilemma also arises in quiet moments that are never mentioned in press releases, such as the late-night spreadsheet, the cap table model, or the depressing moment when the “amazing” term sheet is accompanied by expectations that subtly alter the course of your business. A huge valuation can be a reward, but it can also be a trap, forcing you to act out a story. Hire more quickly. Increase your burn. “Aim high.” Keep the narrative in the air. Seeing founders agree to these terms while also somewhat suspecting that they are agreeing to a series of unresolved future arguments creates a certain tension.
Yes, the dead math is back. However, it goes beyond exaggerated figures. It has to do with how those figures make everyone act. They make investors act as though they are certain. They make founders pretend that growth is linear. They make workers act as though being volatile is a good thing. In a world where a company can reach $4 billion before it has actually experienced its first recession, product failure, or customer revolt, the valuation begins to function more like a spell than a measurement—strong, seductive, and brittle if too many people lose faith in it at once.

