Business
Meet all 33 Silicon Valley power players at Trump’s high-profile tech dinner — and Elon Musk’s explanation for why he wasn’t there
Published
5 months agoon
By
Jace Porter
President Donald Trump convened some of Silicon Valley’s most influential figures Thursday evening at the White House, hosting a high-profile dinner that underscored the tech industry’s evolving relationship with his administration. The gathering in the newly renovated Rose Garden brought together 33 attendees, including CEOs from major technology companies, venture capitalists, and administration officials. With 13 billionaires in attendance and many others worth millions of dollars, the event was easily one of the wealthiest gatherings in the history of the White House.
Notably absent from the dinner were Elon Musk, Tesla’s CEO and former Trump ally, and Jensen Huang, Nvidia’s chief executive and Fortune‘s Most Powerful Person in Business. Musk claimed on social media that he “was invited, but unfortunately could not attend,” though initial reports suggested he was not on the guest list. Huang, meanwhile, has a pattern of skipping high-profile events, preferring direct one-on-one meetings.
The event followed an AI education summit hosted earlier that day by First Lady Melania Trump and served as the first major gathering in the Rose Garden since its renovation was completed in August 2025.
The dinner underscored Silicon Valley’s strategic realignment with the Trump administration, as companies seek favorable regulatory treatment and government contracts while positioning themselves for the AI boom. Several attendees announced significant U.S. investment commitments: Trump asked Mark Zuckerberg directly, for instance, how much he was planning on committing to the U.S., and the Facebook founder responded with $600 billion through 2028.
The event marked a significant evolution from Trump’s historically contentious relationship with Big Tech, reflecting the industry’s recognition that cooperation with the administration serves their business interests in an increasingly competitive global technology landscape.
Alex Wong/Getty Images
The 33 Attendees: Who’s who of tech and politics
1. President Donald Trump
The host and 47th President of the United States, Trump has aggressively courted the tech industry during his second term, seeking investment commitments and closer cooperation on artificial intelligence initiatives.
2. First Lady Melania Trump
The First Lady chairs the newly formed AI Education Task Force, which held its inaugural meeting earlier that day. She sat next to Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates during the dinner.
3. Susie Wiles
Trump’s White House Chief of Staff and the first woman to hold the position. The 67-year-old veteran political strategist has been credited with running Trump’s most disciplined campaign in 2024. Born in New Jersey, she began her political career working for Congressman Jack Kemp before joining Ronald Reagan’s 1980 presidential campaign. Wiles spent much of her career in Florida politics, managing campaigns for mayors, governors, and eventually becoming Trump’s Florida campaign manager in 2016. She served as co-campaign manager for Trump’s successful 2024 bid.
4. Sergey Brin
The 52-year-old Google co-founder, born in Moscow in 1973, immigrated to the United States with his family at age six to escape Soviet antisemitism. He earned degrees from the University of Maryland and Stanford, where he met Larry Page and co-founded Google in 1998. Brin stepped down from Alphabet’s day-to-day operations in 2019 but returned to lead AI efforts following ChatGPT’s launch in 2023. With an estimated net worth of $191 billion, he ranks among the world’s wealthiest individuals. At the dinner, Trump praised Brin’s “wonderful MAGA girlfriend,” referring to Gerelyn Gilbert-Soto.
5. Gerelyn Gilbert-Soto
Brin’s girlfriend, who drew attention when Trump during the dinner, is the founder of GG Health Coach, helping people achieve better health through balanced nutrition and lifestyle changes. She appeared starstruck when Trump asked her to speak, expressing gratitude for being in his presence.
6. Sam Altman
The 40-year-old CEO of OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, thanked Trump for the administration’s support for OpenAI’s $500 billion Project Stargate infrastructure initiative with SoftBank and Oracle. The U.S. Department of Defense recently awarded OpenAI a $200 million contract for AI tools development.
7. Greg Brockman
The 37-year-old president and co-founder of OpenAI, born in North Dakota in 1987, attended Harvard briefly before transferring to MIT, which he left to join Stripe as its first CTO in 2013. He co-founded OpenAI in 2015 with Sam Altman and others. Known for his technical expertise and leadership in AI development, Brockman played a key role in unveiling GPT-4 in 2023. He temporarily left OpenAI during the November 2023 leadership crisis but returned as president.
8. Anna Brockman
Greg Brockman’s wife, who is Korean-American and became a notable figure during OpenAI’s 2023 leadership crisis when she reportedly cried and pleaded with board member Ilya Sutskever to reverse his decision to oust Sam Altman. The couple married in 2019 in a ceremony officiated by Sutskever at OpenAI’s offices, with a robotic hand serving as ring bearer.
9. Safra Catz
The 63-year-old CEO of Oracle is one of the highest-paid female CEOs in the United States. Born in Israel in 1961, she immigrated to Massachusetts at age six and eventually graduated from the Wharton School and University of Pennsylvania Law School. She later worked as a managing director at investment bank Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette before joining Oracle in 1999. She became CEO in 2014 and has overseen dozens of acquisitions during her tenure. Catz has been instrumental in Oracle’s cloud computing transformation.
10. Gal Tirosh
Safra Catz’s husband, an Israeli-born former soccer coach who prefers to maintain a low public profile. The couple married in 1997 and has two sons. Tirosh’s Israeli background has influenced his support for initiatives involving technology partnerships between the U.S. and Israel.
11. Jason Chang
The 42-year-old CEO of CSBio, a peptide and synthesizer manufacturing company in Menlo Park, California, holds a Bachelor’s in Economics from UC San Diego and a Master’s in Biochemistry from Oxford University. He joined CSBio in 2009 as director of operations and worked his way up to CEO in 2019. The company provides custom peptides and automated peptide synthesizers to the global biotech community, with a focus on both R&D and commercial manufacturing.
12. Meredith O’Rourke
Trump’s national finance director and senior advisor for his 2024 campaign is a longtime Republican fundraiser from Tallahassee, Florida. She founded The O’Rourke Group in 1997 and has been organizing high-level GOP fundraising events for nearly three decades. She graduated from Virginia Commonwealth University and has been instrumental in Trump’s campaign finance operations.
Alex Wong/Getty Images
13. Nathalie Dompé
The 35-year-old Co-CEO of Dompé farmaceutici, an Italian biopharmaceutical company, and CEO of Dompé Holdings, was born in Milan in 1990 to pharmaceutical mogul Sergio Dompé. She graduated from Bocconi University with honors in business administration. She is also the partner of investor Chamath Palihapitiya. In addition to her executive roles, she has worked as a model for brands like Vogue and Giorgio Armani. She oversees market development and strategic approval for new drugs launched in the United States.
14. Tony Fabrizio
Trump’s chief pollster and one of the nation’s leading Republican strategists, the 65-year-old has served as chief pollster on five presidential campaigns, including Trump’s successful 2016 and 2024 victories. Born in 1960, Fabrizio graduated from Long Island University and founded Fabrizio, Lee & Associates. He has worked for numerous senators, governors, and Fortune 500 companies including Visa, Bank of America, and Google. In 2017, he received the American Association of Political Consultants’ “Pollster of the Year” award for his work on Trump’s 2016 campaign.
15. Dylan Field
The 33-year-old co-founder and CEO of Figma, the collaborative design platform, Field grew up in Sonoma County, California, and briefly attended Brown University before dropping out to accept a $100,000 Thiel Fellowship in 2012. He co-founded Figma at age 19 with teaching assistant Evan Wallace. Despite early struggles and near-employee exodus, Field persevered to build Figma into a design industry leader. The company went public in 2025 with a valuation exceeding $68 billion, making Field worth approximately $6.6 billion.
16. John Hering
The co-founder and executive chairman of cybersecurity company Lookout and a partner at Vy Capital, the 42-year-old dropped out of USC to co-found Lookout, which now protects over 175 million devices globally including those used by the U.S. Department of Defense. BusinessWeek named him a Best Young Tech Entrepreneur, and Fortune included him on its 40 Under 40 list. He has also co-founded cybersecurity firms Coalition and Redacted.
17. Jared Isaacman
The 42-year-old billionaire entrepreneur and commercial astronaut, founder and chairman of payment processor Shift4 Payments, Isaacman dropped out of high school to start his first company, eventually building Shift4 into a business processing $200 billion annually. He founded defense contractor Draken International and has commanded two SpaceX missions, including Inspiration4, the first all-civilian spaceflight, and Polaris Dawn, where he performed the first commercial spacewalk. Trump nominated him as NASA Administrator in December 2024 but withdrew the nomination in May 2025 amid his feud with Elon Musk. His estimated net worth is $1.5 billion.
Alex Wong/Getty Images
18. Sunny Madra
Chief operating officer and president of AI chip company Groq, the Canadian entrepreneur has founded multiple successful startups, including Definitive Intelligence (acquired by Groq), Autonomic (acquired by Ford), and Xtreme Labs (acquired by Pivotal). Madra previously served as Vice President of Ford X, overseeing the automaker’s technology initiatives. Since 2013, he has been an active angel investor in companies including SpaceX, Notion, Uber, and Epic Games.
19. Satya Nadella
The 57-year-old CEO of Microsoft, who thanked Trump for putting policies in place for the U.S. to lead in AI, praised Trump’s approach of supporting rather than fighting technology companies, calling it crucial for maintaining America’s technological leadership globally.
20. Chamath Palihapitiya
Founder and CEO of Social Capital and co-host of the popular “All-In” podcast, the Sri Lankan-American investor and engineer has been a vocal supporter of Trump’s policies and frequently appears at high-profile political events. He was spotted outside the White House before the AI education event and has toured key areas including the West Wing.
21. Sundar Pichai
The CEO of Alphabet and Google announced a $1 billion commitment to education and job training in the U.S., with $150 million dedicated to AI-focused grants. During the dinner, Trump referenced Google’s recent legal victory, telling Pichai: “You had a very good day yesterday,” referring to the company avoiding a major antitrust breakup order.
22. Mark Pincus
The founder of Zynga, the social-gaming company behind FarmVille and other popular mobile games, Pincus has been active in Silicon Valley’s entrepreneurial ecosystem and serves as an advisor to multiple startups and venture capital firms.
23. Vivek Ranadivé
The 67-year-old Indian-American entrepreneur, chairman and CEO of the Sacramento Kings NBA team, who is also the founder of TIBCO Software, was born in Mumbai in 1957. He immigrated to the U.S. at age 16, earned degrees from MIT and Harvard Business School, and founded several technology companies, earning the nickname “Mr. Real Time” for his work in event processing software. In 2013, he became the first Indian majority owner of an NBA team when he purchased the Kings. He currently runs Bow Capital, an early-stage venture firm. His estimated net worth is $700 million.
Alex Wong/Getty Images
24. David Sacks
The White House AI and crypto czar, serving as chairman of the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology, is a member of the “PayPal Mafia.” Sacks was appointed in December 2024 to oversee the administration’s artificial intelligence and cryptocurrency policies.
25. Shyam Sankar
The 44-year-old CTO and EVP of Palantir Technologies was born in Mumbai and raised in Orlando, Florida. Sankar joined Palantir as employee No. 13 in 2006 and pioneered the company’s “forward deployed engineer” model. He holds degrees from Cornell University in electrical and computer engineering and Stanford University in management science and engineering. Under his leadership, Palantir has transformed from a defense-focused startup to a publicly traded S&P 500 company. He also serves as chairman of Ginkgo Bioworks and is recognized as one of the top seven people in defense tech.
26. Jamie Siminoff
The 47-year-old founder of Ring, the smart doorbell company that Amazon acquired for over $1 billion in 2018, Siminoff created the world’s first Wi-Fi video doorbell in his garage. He holds a Bachelor’s in Entrepreneurship from Babson College and recently returned to Amazon as vice president overseeing Ring and other smart-home initiatives after a brief stint as CEO of smart-lock company Latch. His estimated net worth is $300 million.
27. Lisa Su
The 55-year-old CEO of Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), who praised Trump’s administration for supporting the semiconductor industry, noted the “incredible acceleration” the industry has seen since Trump took office and expressed gratitude for the administration’s support in building the “brains behind all of the wonderful AI” being developed.
28. Alexandr Wang
The 28-year-old former CEO of Scale AI and newly appointed chief AI Officer at Meta was born in Los Alamos, New Mexico, to Chinese immigrant parents who worked as physicists. Wang dropped out of MIT at 19 to co-found Scale AI in 2016. He briefly became the world’s youngest self-made billionaire in 2021 at age 24. In June 2025, Meta acquired a 49% stake in Scale AI for $14.3 billion, bringing Wang into Meta to head its Superintelligence Labs. He qualified for the Math Olympiad and US Physics Team as a teenager and holds over 70 patents.
Alex Wong/Getty Images
29. Sanjay Mehrotra
The 65-year-old president and CEO of Micron Technology, a leading semiconductor memory company, was born in India. Mehrotra earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees in electrical engineering and computer science from UC Berkeley and co-founded SanDisk in 1988, serving as its president and CEO until its $16 billion acquisition by Western Digital in 2016. He joined Micron in 2017 and has steered the company’s focus toward AI, 5G, and autonomous vehicles. He holds more than 70 patents and serves on multiple boards including CDW and Stanford Health Care.
30. Tim Cook
The CEO of Apple recently announced a $100 billion domestic manufacturing commitment and praised Trump’s focus on innovation. He was seated prominently at the dinner and has maintained a close relationship with the administration.
31. David Limp
The 58-year-old CEO of Blue Origin, Jeff Bezos’s space company, Limp spent over 13 years at Amazon as senior vice president of devices and services, overseeing Alexa, Echo, Kindle, Fire devices, and Project Kuiper satellite internet. He previously worked at Apple for about 10 years and served as venture partner at Azure Capital Partners. He joined Blue Origin as CEO in December 2023 to focus on manufacturing at scale and instilling urgency in the company culture. He holds degrees in computer science and mathematics from Vanderbilt University and a management degree from Stanford.
32. Mark Zuckerberg
The Meta CEO, who sat next to Trump and was the first executive called upon to speak, thanked the president for hosting and noted that “all the companies here are building huge investments in the country” for data centers and AI infrastructure. He recently ended Meta’s collaboration with third-party fact-checkers and has realigned company policies with the administration’s priorities.
33. Bill Gates
The Microsoft co-founder and philanthropist, who sat next to First Lady Melania Trump, discussed his work on advancing healthcare and vaccine technology, expressing his desire to collaborate with Trump on elevating “American innovation to the next level” to cure diseases like sickle cell anemia and HIV. Despite policy disagreements in the past, Gates praised Trump for his “incredible leadership.”
For this story, Fortune used generative AI to help with an initial draft. An editor verified the accuracy of the information before publishing.
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Business
As risk skyrockets, current and former CFOs are in demand for audit committees
Published
5 minutes agoon
January 21, 2026By
Jace Porter
Good morning. As audit committees confront a rapidly expanding risk landscape, their role in corporate governance is being reshaped. Boards have often turned to current and former CFOs as independent directors, particularly for audit committees, because of their ability to translate complex operational and financial realities into effective oversight.
For example, this month, J. Michael Hansen, former EVP and CFO of Cintas Corporation, was appointed to the audit committee at Paychex. In July, Britt Vitalone, EVP and CFO of McKesson Corporation, was appointed to the audit committee of Align Technology’s board of directors. And in November, Catherine Birkett, CFO of GoCardless, was named chair of the audit and risk committee at Twinkl.
I attended the launch event of the Institute of Internal Auditors’ (IIA) Global Audit Committee Center last week in Washington, D.C., which addressed the challenges and opportunities facing audit committees.
The center is designed to be a resource to strengthen the alliance between audit committees of boards and internal audit in a fast-changing risk environment. It offers research, webinars, and events and will ultimately add formal training programs.
“The center has a very strong core belief—well-informed, engaged, and well-supported audit committees are essential to corporate governance,” said Anthony Pugliese, president and CEO of the IIA.
Pugliese emphasized that board audit committees need to turn to internal audit to truly understand what is happening inside an organization. The event drew members from across the U.S. and around the world, including Canada, Europe, Africa, Latin America, and the Middle East, with Abdullah Alshebeili, CEO of the Saudi Authority of Internal Auditors, in attendance.
CFOs, in particular, work with internal audit on risk assessment, internal controls, and audit readiness, and they share information on financial processes and control issues. Finance chiefs also communicate regularly with the board’s audit committee.
AI and analytics reshape how audit committees see risk
During a panel discussion at the event, Ann Cohen, CFO of the IIA, said audit committees are increasingly using AI and advanced technology to connect different types of risk—third-party, financial, operational, cyber, and regulatory. They are using analytics to surface anomalies and emerging risks earlier, support proactive oversight, and run “what if” analyses before risks materialize. “It allows us to be more responsive to risks and provide more robust assurance to stakeholders,” she said.
A major focus is “everyday AI,” said Sarah Francis of the EY Center for Board Effectiveness. “I think audit committees are really also looking at, ‘How do we start to touch, feel, smell, and get used to the products that are out there?’” Directors, many of whom are active executives, are also thinking about how to deploy these tools effectively. “There have to be clear governance frameworks for AI and analytics,” she said, noting that prompts—and the people who craft them—matter. She highlighted the need for experts who can help frame broader questions around ethics within responsible AI frameworks.
Audit committees can and should engage with technology as they work toward a fully defined plan, commented Luke Whorton, executive search and leadership consultant at Spencer Stuart in the firm’s Financial Officer Practice. “How do you create a foundation, but one that’s agile and responsive, because it’s going to continue to change rapidly?” he asked.
“Audit committees need to be curious,” Cohen said. “They need to challenge management on their inputs, on their assumptions and their judgment, and on what they’ve embedded into their AI outputs.”
The committees that challenge assumptions and lean into technology, alongside strong partnerships with internal audit, could be well-positioned to safeguard trust in an uncertain world.
Sheryl Estrada
sheryl.estrada@fortune.com
Leaderboard
Linda LaGorga will step down as CFO of Entegris, Inc. (NASDAQ: ENTG), an advanced materials science provider, effective Feb. 28. Effective March 1. Mike Sauer, Entegris’ VP, controller and chief accounting officer, will assume the role of interim CFO, in addition to maintaining the responsibilities of his current role. LaGorga will serve as a senior advisor to Entegris through May 15. Entegris has initiated a search process for a permanent CFO with an executive search firm. Sauer has 37 years of experience in finance and accounting roles at Entegris.
Hugo Doetsch was appointed CFO of AuditBoard, a governance, risk, and compliance platform. Doetsch brings over two decades of financial leadership and strategic operating experience to AuditBoard. Most recently, he served as CFO at symplr, an enterprise health care operations software provider. Before that, he was CFO at NetDocuments, a cloud-based content management platform. Doetsch also held senior leadership roles at Ping Identity, where he assisted the company in a 2019 initial public offering.
Big Deal
The 2026 Fortune World’s Most Admired Companies list was released this morning. The annual ranking of corporate reputation is based on a poll of some 3,000 executives, directors, and analysts.
Apple has been No. 1 for 19 consecutive years. Amazon and Microsoft have filled out the top three for seven years in a row. Berkshire Hathaway (No. 6) and Alphabet (No. 8) have each been in the top 10 for well over a decade. Berkshire, the conglomerate nurtured by Warren Buffett, holds the distinction of having been on the All-Star list every single year since it launched in 1998; it shares that honor with Microsoft, Coca-Cola, Toyota Motor, and Johnson & Johnson.
Going deeper
“Who Gets Replaced by AI and Why?” is a report in Wharton’s business journal. New research from Wharton’s Pinar Yildirim explores how AI can impact employee motivation when it is implemented in the wrong part of a team’s workflow. The research addresses topics such as how managers should deploy AI capacity in teams and which positions are most vulnerable to being displaced by AI.
Overheard
“Working closely with David Ellison and this exceptional management team made the decision to resign from the board and jump in fully as CFO an easy one.”
—Dennis K. Cinelli wrote in a LinkedIn post on Tuesday regarding his appointment, effective Jan. 15, as CFO of Paramount, and his resignation from the company’s board. Most recently, Cinelli served as CFO of Scale AI, and he previously held senior finance and operational roles at Uber.
Business
Exclusive: Alphabet’s CapitalG names Jill Chase and Alex Nichols as general partners
Published
37 minutes agoon
January 21, 2026By
Jace Porter
I love watching “Next Man Up” basketball, where the spotlight rotates unpredictably. One night it’s the bench guard dropping 30, the next it’s the role player posting a triple-double.
CapitalG’s Jill Chase—who captained her college basketball team at Williams College—says this logic actually applies to Alphabet’s growth firm. When I ask her what basketball team is most like CapitalG, she lists the WNBA’s Golden State Valkyries.
“Everybody has a different skill set, and everybody is willing to drop anything to help each other win,” said Chase. “It’s a different person every night who wins the game. And I think that’s really consistent with the way CapitalG is building its culture.”
For the first time since the firm was started in 2013, it’s promoting two general partners, Chase and Alex Nichols, Fortune has exclusively learned. Chase, who joined CapitalG in 2020 specifically with a thesis around AI, has backed Abridge, Baseten, Canva, LangChain, Physical Intelligence, and Rippling.
Nichols, meanwhile, joined CapitalG in 2018 as an associate and was promoted to partner just two years ago. He previously worked with managing partner Laela Sturdy on the firm’s investments in Duolingo, Stripe, and Whatnot, and recently led CapitalG’s investment in Zach Dell’s energy startup BasePower. At a moment where there’s mounting angst around data centers and what it will take to power them, Nichols has a surprising take on how AI will affect energy—that both batteries and solar are getting cheaper and better at something like Moore’s Law speed. Those twin cost curves, over time, should actually drive energy prices down.
“I’m actually very optimistic about the future of energy prices,” he said. “You look at the history of energy consumption versus GDP. And cheap energy means more production, more income, and means a higher standard of living.”
At a moment when venture is perhaps more competitive than ever—and there are certainly some solo GPs out there making their mark—there’s an argument that as lines blur between disciplines in an AI-ified world, venture is by necessity a team sport.
Sturdy—who’s been CapitalG’s managing partner since 2023 (and also captained her college basketball team)—and Chase both have clearly taken some learnings from their time on the court. Chase sees venture overall as becoming more team-oriented: “Historically, it used to be like ‘you made general partner, go out and win your deal.’ To me, that’s not the right way to be successful in venture ever.”
Sturdy adds that in basketball, like venture, “We have to look at the scoreboard every once in a while, and you have to get back up when you get crushed… And, of course, coming together is better than playing alone.”
Term Sheet Podcast…This week, I spoke with Exelon CEO Calvin Butler. As resource-hungry data centers continue to sprout across the country, many are questioning whether the nation’s utility network can keep pace with such large-scale demand. Butler says it can. Listen and watch here.
See you tomorrow,
Allie Garfinkle
X: @agarfinks
Email: alexandra.garfinkle@fortune.com
Submit a deal for the Term Sheet newsletter here.
Joey Abrams curated the deals section of today’s newsletter. Subscribe here.
VENTURE CAPITAL
– humans&, a San Francisco-based AI lab, raised $480 million in seed funding. SV Angel and Georges Harik led the round and were joined by NVIDIA and others.
– Emergent, a San Francisco-based platform designed for AI software creation, raised $70 million in Series B funding. Khosla Ventures and SoftBank led the round and were joined by Prosus, Lightspeed, Together, and Y Combinator.
– Exciva, a Heidelberg, Germany-based developer of therapeutics designed for neuropsychiatric conditions, raised €51 million ($59 million) in Series B funding. Gimv and EQT Life Sciences led the round and were joined by Fountain Healthcare Partners, LifeArc Ventures, and others.
– Pomelo, a Buenos Aires, Argentina-based payments infrastructure company, raised $55 million in Series C funding. Kaszek and Insight Partners led the round and were joined by Index Ventures, Adams Street Partners, S32, and others.
– Cloover, a Berlin, Germany-based operating system designed for energy independence, raised $22 million in Series A funding. MMC Ventures and QED Investors led the round and were joined by Lowercarbon Capital, BNVT Capital, Bosch Ventures, and others.
– Statusphere, a Winter Park, Fla.-based influencer marketing technology platform, raised $18 million in Series A funding. Volition Capital led the round and was joined by HearstLab, 1984 Ventures, and How Women Invest.
– Dominion Dynamics, an Ottawa, Canada-based defense technology company, raised $21M CAD ($15.2M USD) in seed funding. Georgian led the round and was joined by Bessemer Venture Partners and British Columbia Investment Management Corporation.
– Cosmos, a New York City-based image collection and discovery platform, raised $15 million in Series A funding. Shine Capital led the round and was joined by Matrix and others.
– Mave, a Toronto, Canada-based real estate AI company, raised $5 million in seed funding from Staircase Ventures, Relay Ventures, N49P, and Alate Partners.
– Stilla, a Stockholm, Sweden-based developer of an AI designed to accommodate entire teams, raised $5 million in pre-seed funding. General Catalyst led the round and was joined by others.
– Asymmetric Security, a London, U.K. and San Francisco-based cyber forensics company, raised $4.2 million in pre-seed funding. Susa Ventures led the round and was joined by Halcyon Ventures, Overlook Ventures, and angel investors.
PRIVATE EQUITY
– ConnectWise, backed by Thoma Bravo, acquired zofiQ, a Toronto, Ontario-based agentic AI technology company designed to automate high-service desk operations. Financial terms were not disclosed.
– Grant Avenue Capital acquired 21st Century Healthcare, a Tempe, Ariz.-based vitamins, minerals, and supplements company. Financial terms were not disclosed.
– Highlander Partners acquired Tapatio, a Vernon, Calif.-based hot sauce brand. Financial terms were not disclosed.
– Platinum Equity acquired Czarnowski Collective, a Chicago, Ill.-based exhibit and events company. Financial terms were not disclosed.
– United Building Solutions, backed by AE Industrial, acquired DFW Mechanical Group, a Wylie, Texas-based HVAC solutions company. Financial terms were not disclosed.
IPOS
– PicPay, a Sao Paolo, Brazil-based digital bank, now plans to raise up to $435.1 million in an offering of 22.9 million shares priced between $16 and $19 on the Nasdaq. The company posted $1.7 billion in revenue for the year ended September 30. J&F International and Banco Original back the company.
– Ethos Technologies, a San Francisco-based online life insurance provider, plans to raise up to $210 million in an offering of 10.5 million shares priced between $18 and $20. The company posted $344 million in revenue for the year ended Sept. 30. General Catalyst, Heroic Ventures, Eric Lantz, and others back the company.
FUNDS + FUNDS OF FUNDS
– Blueprint Equity, a La Jolla, Calif.-based growth equity firm, raised $333 million for its third fund focused on enterprise software, business-to-business, and tech-enabled services companies.
PEOPLE
– Area 15 Ventures, a Castle Pine, Colo.-based venture capital firm, promoted Adam Contos to managing partner.
– Bull City Venture Partners, a Durham, N.C.-based venture capital firm, hired Carly Connell as a principal.
– Harvest Partners, a New York City-based private equity firm, promoted Lucas Rodgers to partner, Matthew Bruckmann and Ian Singleton to principal, and Connor Scro to vice president on the private equity team.
– Wingman Growth Partners, a Greenwich, Conn.-based private equity firm, hired Cheri Reeve as CFO. She previously served as principal and CFO at Atlas Holdings.
Business
Davos 2026: reading the signals, not the headlines
Published
1 hour agoon
January 21, 2026By
Jace Porter
Louisa Loran advises boards and leadership teams on transformation and long-term value creation and currently serves on the boards of Copenhagen Business School and CataCap Private Equity. At Google, Louisa launched a billion-dollar supply chain solutions business, doubled growth in a global industry vertical, and led strategic business transformation for the company’s largest customers in EMEA—working at the forefront of AI, data, and platform innovation. At Maersk, she co-authored the strategy that redefined the brand globally and doubled its share price, helping pivot the company from traditional shipping to integrated logistics. Her career began in the luxury and FMCG space with Moët Hennessy and Diageo, where she built iconic brands and led innovation at the intersection of heritage and digital transformation.
As risk skyrockets, current and former CFOs are in demand for audit committees
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Exclusive: Alphabet’s CapitalG names Jill Chase and Alex Nichols as general partners
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