The VC landscape favours startups with proven traction, leaving many promising founders without the initial capital, mentorship, or infrastructure needed to validate ideas and build teams. Antler solves this by offering a company-building platform that provides residency programs, seed investments, and hands-on guidance from day zero.

The firm just closed its second US fund alongside others in Europe and Asia, securing $510 million in commitments from institutional investors, including the New Mexico State Investment Council, EIFO, and university endowments.

Half of this capital is allocated to US founders as Antler expands with a new San Francisco residency and key hires.

Democratising access to startup resources

Magnus Grimeland, Antler’s founder and CEO, brings experience as a serial entrepreneur who recognised the barriers to entry for early-stage founders worldwide. The mission centres on partnering with institutions seeking exposure to nascent tech innovations, while the vision accelerates global entrepreneurship amid AI growth, fostering companies that signal future trends.

“With the transition to AI, the growth in global innovation is accelerating at unprecedented speed and across more regions than ever. We’re increasingly partnering with institutions that want investment exposure to technology companies at the earliest inception stages, as well as the insights that signal how the future might evolve,” said Grimeland.

Antler’s core technology is a scalable company-building engine that has backed over 1,800 startups, including 400 in the past year, with two recent unicorns: Airalo (eSIM tech) and Lovable (vibe coding platform).

Unlike traditional VCs such as Y Combinator, Antler differentiates through global scale, earlier intervention, and follow-on funding via Elevate. Competitors like Entrepreneur First prioritise pre-team formation, but Antler stands out with its end-to-end model from inception to unicorn potential.

What’s next?

Antler plans to allocate 50% of its new capital to U.S. startups through its San Francisco program, expanding its leadership team. The firm aims to invest in additional sectors, including AI, housing, and biotech, building on US portfolio successes such as Agentio, Sweatpals, and AminoChain.

Global fund closes will sustain growth across regions, targeting even more unicorns amid accelerating innovation.