Retail Investors to Get Access to SpaceX and Anthropic With New Fund

Powerlaw Corp., a fund that owns stakes in Anduril Industries Inc., SpaceX, OpenAI and Anthropic PBC, is filing to sell shares in New York, giving retail investors a shot at profiting from some of the biggest private companies in artificial intelligence, defense and space.
The fund is part of Powerlaw Capital Group, a platform run by San Francisco-based Akkadian Ventures that specializes in buying up shares in private companies from existing backers, the company said in a statement on Tuesday. The company, which has more than $1.2 billion in assets under management, disclosed its plans in in a regulatory filing and still needs approval from the US Securities & Exchange Commission to go ahead with the listing.
Individual US investors have been largely cut off from the exponential growth of companies like OpenAI, which has held recent talks to raise funds at a valuation of as much as $830 billion, up from less than $30 billion a few years ago. By the time companies like this list, much of their value would have already accrued to large venture capital firms or insiders. Powerlaw is part of a breed of new vehicles emerging to bridge that gap for so-called mom-and-pop investors.
“With the pool of capital in private markets, the best companies are not choosing to go public,” said John Spinale, managing partner of venture firm Jazz Venture Partners and an investor in Powerlaw Corp. “This robs the public the ability to access the high-growth firms.”
The fund’s name come from the power-law dynamics in venture investing, where a small number of companies have historically driven a disproportionate percentage of outcomes. It’s invested $355 million across 18 of the world’s most valuable private tech companies through secondary transactions. That’s included direct purchases, striking deals with employees to buy their shares, or banding together with other small investors in a special purpose vehicle.
The fund is opting for a direct listing, which means unlike a traditional IPO — where new shares are sold to raise capital— it will sell existing shares by current stockholders. Once the fund receives regulatory approval, investors can buy shares through a brokerage account on the open market, just like buying any other listed stock.
