Tiger Global launches new $2B–$3B VC fund as it pulls back from startup boom era
Posted On December 8, 2025
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Tiger Global Management is heading back into fundraising mode with a smaller target and a more restrained posture than the one that defined its venture push earlier this decade.
In a letter sent to investors on Monday and reviewed by CNBC, the firm said it is launching a new venture capital vehicle, Private Investment Partners 17, with plans to raise between $2 billion and $3 billion. The firm told investors the new fund will follow the same “strategy, size and construction” as both its earliest venture efforts and PIP 16, its most recent fund.
“Tiger Global Management announced Monday the launch of its latest venture capital fund, Private Investment Partners 17, targeting a raise between about $2 billion and $3 billion,” CNBC reported, citing a letter to investors.
That comparison carries weight. PIP 16 set out with a $6 billion goal and closed at roughly $2.2 billion. At the time, Tiger Global and its peers were beginning to step back from the free-spending phase that defined the startup boom. The firm’s biggest positions in that fund are OpenAI and Waymo, two investments made in 2021 that have aged far better than most late-stage bets from that period.
The new fundraising target points to how sharply the firm has shifted gears. Tiger Global was one of the most aggressive forces in venture capital during the pandemic-era surge. In 2021, it led 212 investment rounds, according to Crunchbase data. This year, that number has dropped to nine new private investments.
During the 2021 surge, Tiger Global became one of the most active venture investors in the market, backing hundreds of startups, including Stripe, ByteDance, and Nuro. That breakneck pace left the firm exposed when valuations fell in 2022, forcing write-downs across multiple funds and pushing Tiger toward a slower, more selective investment approach.
The slowdown follows several years of pressure on Tiger’s venture portfolio. Valuations across private markets fell, public tech stocks reset, and exit windows stayed largely shut. Tiger reduced deployment as losses mounted across funds raised during the peak.
The firm’s standout wins underline the contrast. Tiger first backed OpenAI in 2021 at a valuation below $16 billion. It invested in Waymo that same year at around $39 billion. Those stakes now sit on sizable gains, reinforcing the idea that Tiger’s strongest outcomes came from selective bets rather than sheer deal volume.
Founded in 2001, Tiger Global has long invested across public and private markets, backing global companies built around technological innovation with a long-term lens. PIP 17 suggests the firm is leaning back into that original playbook. The era of sweeping late-stage check-writing appears over. What replaces it looks quieter, tighter, and far more measured.
