Two Top VC Firms Bet on a Second Life for Twitter as a Startup

Musk Gets Extra $7 Billion in Financing for Twitter
Lock
This article is for subscribers only.

Twitter Inc. is a strange target for venture capitalists. It’s 16 years old, growing slowly and publicly traded, all anathema to what VCs want. Yet, Elon Musk somehow persuaded two of the world’s most prominent VC firms, Andreessen Horowitz and Sequoia Capital, to invest in his effort to take Twitter private.

The deal may have been a nonstarter for these firms a few years ago, but recent changes to how they operate would allow more of these sorts of nontraditional investments in the future. Although each firm began as a pure VC outfit, they’re now both so-called registered investment advisers, allowing them to dabble in private equity transactions or public stocks and hold cryptocurrencies.