The Inquisitive VC

Nawaz Ahmed

Speaking to leading Investors and Entrepreneurs around the world - Check out our Substack for the previous conversations!

  1. The Debrief: SPV Layering | Anthropic’s Secondary Market Crackdown | SpaceX Liquidity Time Bomb

    Jun 11

    The Debrief: SPV Layering | Anthropic’s Secondary Market Crackdown | SpaceX Liquidity Time Bomb

    In Episode 2 of The Debrief, Nawaz and Vignesh unpack some of the most fascinating developments in venture capital, private markets, and tech investing. The conversation begins with the surprising transformation of Allbirds from a direct-to-consumer footwear brand into an AI infrastructure company before diving deep into Anthropic’s crackdown on unauthorised secondary share sales. The pair explore the growing complexity of SPV (Special Purpose Vehicle) investing, the risks hidden within layered secondary market structures, and why retail investors may be unknowingly paying enormous fees for exposure to high-profile companies like Anthropic and SpaceX. They also discuss the implications of SpaceX’s anticipated IPO, the evolving private market landscape in New Zealand, and the emergence of the Rocket Lab Mafia as a catalyst for the next generation of founders. This episode offers an insider’s perspective on venture capital, secondary markets, startup ecosystems, and the unintended consequences of financial engineering. Key Moments• [00:00:50] Allbirds shocks the market by pivoting from footwear to AI infrastructure under a new identity.• [00:05:45] Anthropic’s warning that unauthorised secondary share sales may be void and unenforceable.• [00:08:30] Understanding SPVs, how layered structures work, and who profits from them.• [00:16:00] The hidden fees inside multi-layer SPVs and why investors need to understand their position in the stack.• [00:21:00] SpaceX secondary markets, investor demand, and the potential fallout from complex financial structures.• [00:28:00] How SPVs and secondary markets are beginning to emerge within New Zealand’s startup ecosystem.• [00:33:00] Understanding ordinary shares versus preference shares and why the distinction matters for investors.• [00:37:00] The rise of the Rocket Lab Mafia and its influence on New Zealand’s aerospace and startup sectors.• [00:44:00] Whether successful founders should reinvest more heavily into the local venture ecosystem.

    49 min
  2. The Debrief | Allbirds: From $4BN to $68M | Halter's Raise at $3.4BN | The Truth About Startup Boards

    Apr 22

    The Debrief | Allbirds: From $4BN to $68M | Halter's Raise at $3.4BN | The Truth About Startup Boards

    Introduction In this first episode of The Debrief, Nawaz and Vignesh launch a new podcast focused on venture, technology, and startup conversations that are more relevant to the New Zealand ecosystem. They unpack the collapse of Allbirds from a heavily hyped public company to a distressed acquisition, debate whether direct-to-consumer brands really fit venture economics, and explore why companies like Halter are changing how global investors view New Zealand tech. The conversation also moves into founder fears around venture capital and boards, with both hosts arguing that strong governance is usually less about control and more about helping founders scale responsibly. Key Moments ·      [00:00:34] Show launch: Nawaz introduces The Debrief and Vignesh explains why a local NZ-focused venture conversation matters. ·      [00:02:52] Allbirds acquisition: The hosts react to Allbirds being acquired for around $68 million after once peaking near $4 billion. ·      [00:06:14] D2C and venture fit: They question whether consumer brands should raise venture capital or build sustainable businesses through revenue and profit. ·      [00:13:40] Venture as a tool: Vignesh argues founders do not need venture money to pursue their vision, but it can accelerate scale when the business model fits. ·      [00:14:57] Eucalyptus and healthcare D2C: The discussion shifts to why some consumer companies win by solving real needs rather than selling discretionary products. ·      [00:17:36] Halter’s rise: Nawaz and Vignesh discuss Halter as a defining New Zealand venture success story with real local investor participation. ·      [00:21:39] Compounding in venture: Vignesh explains how Halter’s long fundraising arc shows that scale, strong investors, and time can create a flywheel. ·      [00:25:32] Founder control and boards: The episode closes with a candid discussion on why boards exist, what founders get wrong about investor control, and how governance evolves as companies grow.

    34 min

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Speaking to leading Investors and Entrepreneurs around the world - Check out our Substack for the previous conversations!