What does patience look like today when the best companies take 10–15 years to exit, and is it still worth it to wait that long? Today’s episode of Origins dives into one of the most pressing questions in today’s market: how to balance long-term conviction with the need for liquidity.
David Clark, CIO of VenCap and a three-decade veteran of institutional venture investing, returns to the show to bring his rare LP perspective shaped by backing some of the most established venture franchises in the industry. Known for a data-first approach, David offers insight into how top-tier firms consistently generate returns, and how those dynamics evolve as fund sizes scale into the billions.
Together with hosts Nick & Beezer, the group explores the implications of venture capital consolidation, the persistence of power law outcomes, and the shifting role of liquidity in private markets. From the rise and returns of mega-funds like a16z, to the growing importance of secondaries and delayed IPO timelines, the conversation surfaces the core tension of capturing extreme right-tail outcomes while still delivering tangible distributions to LPs.
Along the way, they debate whether “patient capital” is truly a viable strategy, or if today’s venture structure inherently rewards more active portfolio management. Ultimately, today’s discussion offers a data-driven look at how venture is changing and how fund managers can look to stay ahead.
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Quotes
“If our managers have one of those top 1% companies, we want to encourage them to let it ride. Because we don't see the very best managers selling their best companies prematurely. That's not how we've seen the best fund level performance. And if you are able to hold those companies through to their full potential, that's where the real value is created.” – David Clark
“I actually think the late stage private markets have become the public markets for early stage venture fund managers. And I think if you consider [that possibility], you can find much more predictability and consistency in performance, returns, and DPI. As much, or maybe even more than large later stage managers.” – Nick Chirls
“What I've seen in the last few years is people taking exits into consideration, which makes my heart very happy. Because for years people were not, and they weren't thinking about returning capital along the way. You can take 10%, 20% and return 1x or 2x your fund. That is a very credible conversation to have with your LPAC.” – Beezer Clarkson
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Time Stamps
01:13 Meet David Clark, CIO of VenCap
03:29 a16z Fundraising Surge
05:31 First Principles Venture Model
07:18 Public Markets And IPO Scale
09:32 Do Big Funds Want Private
13:17 Power Law Still Rules
14:28 Fund Size And DPI Timing
16:36 Early Stage Fund Math
20:59 Small Funds Versus Platforms
24:02 Portfolio Construction Tradeoffs
25:40 Late Stage As New Public
28:44 Liquidity As A New Skill
30:55 When To Take Chips Off
33:25 Founder Secondaries And Alignment
35:13 Venture Capital Consolidation Risks
40:47 Big Firms Funding Emerging Managers
44:30 Patient Capital Debate
48:00 Going Public Incentive Concerns
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Links
Connect with the guest and hosts on LinkedIn!
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