US startup funding cooled in March
Crunchbase data shows US startup funding slowed sharply in March 2026, thinning the pool of big AI megarounds and tightening runway for many startups. That means some seed‑to‑Series B prospects will be cost‑sensitive on CapEx, while productizing teams may still spend to capture revenue. (news.crunchbase.com)
February’s totals were heavily skewed by a handful of behemoths: global VC hit roughly $189 billion in February, driven in part by OpenAI’s roughly $110 billion round and Anthropic’s reported $30 billion raise. (techcrunch.com) By contrast, one tracker recorded just $2.7 billion deployed across 25 AI rounds in March, with the largest single March deal at about $1.1 billion, illustrating how February’s megadeals inflated month‑to‑month comparisons. (roundly.io) Market analysts note the pendulum toward capital concentration: reported venture deal counts in early 2026 fell sharply, with one analysis saying raw deal volume dropped nearly 50% even as a small number of megadeals continued. (ainvest.com) Investor behavior has shifted toward “high‑conviction” and revenue‑focused financings for earlier stages, with industry trackers documenting a tilt toward disciplined rounds and profitability signals for seed‑to‑Series B companies. (seedscope.ai) Compute and hardware plays still attracted sizable checks where capacity is explicit: industry coverage highlights that new capital rounds increasingly cite buildout of AI compute as a use of proceeds, and hardware vendors such as Cerebras were reported to have raised around $1 billion in recent weeks. (mingooland.com) The net effect for seed‑to‑Series B AI teams is a bifurcated funding market—fewer broad checks but continued, targeted capital for compute‑intensive winners—pressuring many startups to prioritize CapEx efficiency or narrowly scoped revenue projects while a small set of players chase large infrastructure investments. (vntr.vc)