Naval personally takes the stage: The historic collision between ordinary people and venture capital
Author: 0xMedia
Naval has personally stepped in.
This time, he is not discussing wealth, freedom, and leverage on a podcast, nor is he commenting on entrepreneurial trends as a Silicon Valley thinker and angel investor; instead, he is directly serving as the chairman of the investment committee for USVC.
This signal itself is quite intriguing. Naval is not someone who easily endorses financial products. He carries a complex set of labels: co-founder of @AngelList, a representative of early investment culture, a preacher of the Silicon Valley entrepreneurial spirit, and a long-term symbol of thought in the Web3 world.
So when Naval @naval chooses to step into the spotlight for USVC, this is not just about the launch of a new fund. It feels more like a retail extension of AngelList's entrepreneurial financing infrastructure over the past decade.
In the past, AngelList served entrepreneurs, angel investors, fund managers, and private capital networks. Now, it attempts to break down a portion of the venture capital access that was once reserved for a select few, creating a financial entry point that ordinary people can also participate in.
USVC is an SEC-registered fund, with a minimum investment starting at $500, requiring no accredited investor status. Its early portfolio includes companies like OpenAI, Anthropic, xAI, Sierra, Crusoe, Legora, and Vercel.
This is where USVC truly sparks discussion. It is not merely selling a basket of AI star companies; it is responding to an increasingly sharp question of our times: as the most explosive technological growth occurs earlier in private markets, can ordinary people participate in the future sooner?
Over the past decade, the most brutal change in tech investment has not been the explosion of AI, nor the revaluation of SaaS or chip stocks, but rather the overall acceleration of the wealth creation timeline.
Many of the most important companies have completed multiple rounds of massive financing and value leaps before entering the public market. By the time ordinary investors can finally buy in through an IPO or secondary market, the story has often been told many times, valuations have been fully priced by earlier rounds of capital, and the truly asymmetric alpha has already been captured by private capital.
For example, the well-known Manus saw Benchmark lead a $75 million financing round in April 2025, just as it hit the most critical growth window for this AI agent newcomer.
At that time, Manus @ManusAI was valued at about $500 million, and months later, Meta completed an acquisition for over $2 billion, allowing early capital to achieve about 4 times the paper return in a very short time.
This is the most fascinating aspect of venture capital. True alpha often occurs when ordinary people do not yet have the qualification to enter the market.
Names like OpenAI, Anthropic, xAI, and Vercel excite people not just because they represent AI, large models, developer tools, and next-generation software infrastructure, but because they symbolize a fact: the future is being bought up earlier and earlier.
Ordinary people use these products every day, contributing data, attention, subscription revenue, and ecosystem growth, but at the capital level, they often can only stand outside the glass window, watching institutions, funds, and high-net-worth investors participate in value revaluation.
USVC aims to break this layer of glass.
It provides a very direct entry point: ordinary people can participate in a venture capital basket composed of high-growth private tech companies with a minimum investment of $500. This threshold, when placed alongside these asset names, creates a strong contrast.
US Early VC vs S&P 500 Returns, from USVC official website https://usvc.com/
In the past, those who could access such assets were typically top VCs, family offices, sovereign funds, university endowments, or high-net-worth accredited investors. Now, USVC attempts to productize, regulate, and retail this asset exposure, putting it in front of ordinary investors.
However, because of this, USVC cannot be understood merely as a $500 emotional product to buy OpenAI. Its true complexity lies in the fact that venture capital is never just about buying the name of a good company, but rather at what price, at what stage, with what structure, what fees, and under what liquidity conditions it is purchased.
OpenAI, Anthropic, and xAI are certainly the most watched tech companies of this era, but great companies do not automatically equal great investments. Especially after they have already gone through multiple rounds of high-valuation financing, what investors truly need to judge is not whether these companies are strong enough, but whether the future returns remain attractive enough when buying through USVC.
This is also why Naval's involvement is crucial. Naval's symbolic significance is not just that he is influential, but that he represents a long-term understanding of entrepreneurship, capital, networks, and leverage.
One of the most important things about AngelList back in the day was to loosen the entrepreneurial financing from a very small closed circle, allowing more angel investors, entrepreneurs, and new fund managers to connect through the platform.
What USVC is doing today is, in a sense, a continuation of the same logic: if AngelList once reduced the organizational costs of the entrepreneurial financing network, then USVC is now trying to lower the entry barriers for ordinary people to access venture capital assets.
However, expanding access does not equate to the disappearance of risk.
USVC is not an ETF. It cannot be traded like a Nasdaq ETF during the day, nor can it be bought and sold at any time like public stocks. Its underlying assets are shares of private companies and private funds, which inherently have characteristics of low liquidity, opaque valuations, and long exit cycles.
The team mentioned that they hope to achieve a maximum of 5% fund redemptions per quarter in the future, but this does not mean that investors can exit at any time. More accurately, this is a designed partial liquidity, rather than the high liquidity that the underlying assets naturally possess.
The issue of fees cannot be avoided either. USVC's current all-in fee for the first year is 2.5%. At first glance, compared to S&P 500 ETFs, Nasdaq ETFs, or other low-cost index products, this number seems high.
But when compared to traditional venture capital structures, the situation becomes much more complex. The common fee structure for traditional VCs is 2/20, meaning a 2% management fee per year plus a 20% profit share.
If investing indirectly through a fund of funds, there may be an additional layer of fees on top of the underlying VC fees. USVC's claim is that the current 2.5% includes fees related to the underlying funds, with AngelList absorbing costs exceeding this ratio in the first year, while USVC does not charge extra for direct investments.
If it were merely repackaging already very expensive late-stage star assets for retail investors, then 2.5% would be hard to consider cheap. But if it can continuously obtain truly scarce, high-quality private assets that ordinary people cannot access and that still have attractive valuations through the network behind AngelList and Naval, then this fee resembles a cost of entry into the venture capital network.
In other words, the greatest value of USVC lies not in being cheap, but in whether it can continuously provide real, scarce, and worthwhile venture capital access.
This is also where USVC subtly intersects with the Web3 narrative.
In recent years, Web3 has been talking about financial equality. DeFi allows ordinary people to lend, trade, provide liquidity, and participate in yield strategies on-chain; RWA attempts to bring real-world assets on-chain; stablecoins make dollar payments global, low-friction, and real-time.
But USVC is taking a different path. It does not achieve asset openness through tokens, nor does it use on-chain mechanisms to provide liquidity; instead, it brings previously closed private tech asset exposure to ordinary investors through SEC-registered funds, NAV, investment committees, the AngelList network, and compliant distribution channels.
The paths are different, but the underlying questions are similar: who is qualified to own the future? USVC may not be a ticket to guaranteed returns, but it is more likely a ticket to get closer to the future sooner, dyor.
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