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2026-06-09 01:15:11

Mercor Co-Founder Brendan Foody Calls Out Sequoia Over ‘Dual-Pricing’ Valuation Tactics

BitcoinWorld Mercor Co-Founder Brendan Foody Calls Out Sequoia Over ‘Dual-Pricing’ Valuation Tactics In a rare public confrontation, Brendan Foody, co-founder of the $10 billion AI talent platform Mercor, has accused Sequoia Capital of employing a controversial “dual-pricing” strategy in venture rounds that he argues misleads employees and angel investors. The criticism, posted on X, has reignited a broader debate about transparency in startup valuation practices. The ‘Sequoia Scam’ Allegation Foody wrote that in the past six months, he has observed multiple funding rounds where Sequoia invests in two tranches at different valuations. The higher, headline-grabbing number is widely publicized, while the lower, more favorable price remains less visible. “Founders misrepresent this to their employees & then shop it to angels too,” Foody stated. Bitcoin World has previously reported on this mechanism, where a lead VC invests a large portion at a lower valuation and a smaller portion at a higher price, creating a perception of market dominance that may not reflect the investor’s actual average entry cost. The disparity can be stark. For example, when AI-driven IT startup Serval announced a $75 million Series B at a $1 billion valuation, Sequoia’s lowest entry point valued the company at just $400 million — less than half the headline figure. Similarly, at Aaru, a startup using AI for market research, lead investor Redpoint backed the company at a $450 million valuation despite a $1 billion headline. Sequoia’s Defense: A Market Reality Sequoia partner Shaun Maguire responded directly to Foody’s post, calling the characterization unfair. “This has happened approximately five times during my seven years at Sequoia,” Maguire wrote. He explained that when other investors are willing to pay significantly higher multiples for hot companies — especially in AI — Sequoia structures its participation differently to avoid overpaying while maintaining the relationship. “I’m not aware of anything shady here,” he added, noting that venture capital is a repeated game where reputation matters. Maguire’s explanation frames dual-pricing as a pragmatic response to market dynamics rather than a deliberate deception. However, he did not address a critical question: what founders tell employees and angel investors who are not privy to the lower tranche’s existence. Employee Stock Options: A Structural Gap The impact on employees is nuanced. Jason Woo, a partner in valuation and financial modeling at Armanino, told Bitcoin World that employee stock options are theoretically priced based on the blended value of all tranches — not the headline number. Independent 409A appraisals are designed to reflect a company’s fair market value, insulating employees from inflated press releases. But there is a catch. 409A valuations are widely understood to skew low because a lower strike price reduces the company’s tax liability. The appraisal meant to protect employees is structurally incentivized to stay conservative. For angel investors, the situation is even less protected — they write checks based on whatever number a founder chooses to share, with no independent appraiser in the loop. Broader Gaming of Metrics Dual-pricing is not the only way perception is manipulated in venture capital. Niko Bonatsos, a longtime General Catalyst veteran who now leads Verdict Capital, addressed another pervasive tactic during a Bitcoin World event in Athens last month. He described receiving emails with unusually high annual recurring revenue (ARR) numbers, only to discover they were based on a single day’s campaign success extrapolated to 365 days. “Some of these terms have lost meaning,” Bonatsos said. What This Means for Founders and Investors Foody’s public critique highlights a growing frustration among founders who feel that valuation games undermine trust in the startup ecosystem. While calling the practice a “scam” may be strong — given that employee options are theoretically protected — the opacity around dual-pricing structures creates real risks for angel investors and can distort hiring and compensation decisions. For founders, the lesson is clear: transparency matters. Misrepresenting valuations to employees or angels can damage credibility and invite regulatory scrutiny. For VCs, the reputational cost of being perceived as deceptive — even if the practice is legal — may outweigh the tactical advantage of a lower entry price. Conclusion The debate over dual-pricing in venture rounds is unlikely to fade. As Foody’s comments and Maguire’s response show, the line between market reality and manipulation remains contested. What is clear is that the startup ecosystem needs clearer standards for what gets disclosed — and to whom. Without them, the gap between perception and reality will continue to erode trust among the people who make startups work: employees and early investors. FAQs Q1: What is dual-pricing in venture capital? Dual-pricing occurs when a lead investor invests in a startup at two different valuations — a lower price for the bulk of their capital and a higher price for a smaller portion. The higher valuation is often publicized, creating a perception that may not reflect the investor’s true average cost. Q2: Does dual-pricing harm employees? Employee stock options are theoretically protected by independent 409A valuations, which are supposed to reflect fair market value. However, these valuations tend to be conservative due to tax incentives, so employees may still be affected if the headline valuation influences hiring or compensation expectations. Q3: Is dual-pricing illegal? Dual-pricing itself is not illegal, but it raises ethical questions about transparency, especially when founders misrepresent valuations to employees or angel investors. Regulatory scrutiny could increase if the practice becomes more widespread or leads to investor harm. This post Mercor Co-Founder Brendan Foody Calls Out Sequoia Over ‘Dual-Pricing’ Valuation Tactics first appeared on BitcoinWorld .

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