YC-backed CrowdVolt shakes up the secondary ticket market with its bid-ask model

CrowdVolt-founders in front of Y Combinator sign

Image Credits: CrowdVolt

The current secondary ticket exchange system is fraught with several issues, such as tickets being resold at prices much higher than their face value, exorbitant fees and other additional costs. Not to mention the risk of purchasing counterfeit or invalid tickets, resulting in a disappointing user experience. 

CrowdVolt wants to disrupt the space with its user-centric, bid-ask ticket marketplace, which aims to give buyers an affordable ticket price with full transparency. A graduate of Y Combinator’s Winter 2024 batch, CrowdVolt operates on a model similar to sneaker resell marketplace StockX, meaning buyers submit bids on tickets, and sellers set asking prices. When a bid aligns with an ask, the transaction is complete.

The platform’s bid-ask model could appeal to concertgoers because it allows them to name their desired price. Traditionally, secondary ticket marketplaces are focused on how much the seller wants to sell a ticket for, but CrowdVolt changes that. CrowdVolt also enables buyers and sellers to message each other, making ticket-buying less anonymous.

Earlier this year, CrowdVolt raised $1.4 million in funding; it’s backed by Brickyard VC, Goodwater Capital and Pioneer Fund, as well as angel investors such as YouTube co-founder Jawed Karim. The company plans to use the new capital to launch in additional markets in a few months, starting with Miami, Chicago and various cities in California. The funding will also go toward product development. 

Image Credits: CrowdVolt

CrowdVolt launched in late January and specifically caters to rave and EDM (electronic dance music) fans. It’s currently only available in New York, with the majority of venues located in Brooklyn, which is a popular destination among the EDM crowd. 

The startup’s journey began with three friends — Max Hammer (CEO), Josh Karol (CTO) and Aria Mohseni (COO) — who all share a deep love for EDM. Their personal frustration with the current ticketing process led them to create a platform designed to meet buyers’ needs. 

“One of our co-founders [Mohseni] is a DJ, so we started to go to a lot of events and found the [ticketing] process particularly friction intensive and opaque, ranging from releases six to nine months in advance to unclear buying processes with incumbents in the space,” Hammer told TechCrunch. “Other platforms lack buyer intent … We have a true-sided marketplace.”

The startup launched at an opportune time, given that one of the largest players, Ticketmaster, is in hot water. Apart from being under fire for its excessively high service charges, the Department of Justice recently filed an antitrust lawsuit alleging monopolistic practices. The company also confirmed that it was hacked, resulting in a data breach and theft of personal information.

CrowdVolt has grown to over 3,000 active users across around 250 listed events.  

The platform is currently only available on the web, but the company plans to launch a mobile app in six months.

YC-backed CrowdVolt shakes up the secondary ticket market with its bid-ask model

CrowdVolt-founders in front of Y Combinator sign

Image Credits: CrowdVolt

The current secondary ticket exchange system is fraught with several issues, such as tickets being resold at prices much higher than their face value, exorbitant fees and other additional costs. Not to mention the risk of purchasing counterfeit or invalid tickets, resulting in a disappointing user experience. 

CrowdVolt wants to disrupt the space with its user-centric, bid-ask ticket marketplace, which aims to give buyers an affordable ticket price with full transparency. A graduate of Y Combinator’s Winter 2024 batch, CrowdVolt operates on a model similar to sneaker resell marketplace StockX, meaning buyers submit bids on tickets, and sellers set asking prices. When a bid aligns with an ask, the transaction is complete.

The platform’s bid-ask model could appeal to concertgoers because it allows them to name their desired price. Traditionally, secondary ticket marketplaces are focused on how much the seller wants to sell a ticket for, but CrowdVolt changes that. CrowdVolt also enables buyers and sellers to message each other, making ticket-buying less anonymous.

Earlier this year, CrowdVolt raised $1.4 million in funding; it’s backed by Brickyard VC, Goodwater Capital and Pioneer Fund, as well as angel investors such as YouTube co-founder Jawed Karim. The company plans to use the new capital to launch in additional markets in a few months, starting with Miami, Chicago and various cities in California. The funding will also go toward product development. 

Image Credits: CrowdVolt

CrowdVolt launched in late January and specifically caters to rave and EDM (electronic dance music) fans. It’s currently only available in New York, with the majority of venues located in Brooklyn, which is a popular destination among the EDM crowd. 

The startup’s journey began with three friends — Max Hammer (CEO), Josh Karol (CTO) and Aria Mohseni (COO) — who all share a deep love for EDM. Their personal frustration with the current ticketing process led them to create a platform designed to meet buyers’ needs. 

“One of our co-founders [Mohseni] is a DJ, so we started to go to a lot of events and found the [ticketing] process particularly friction intensive and opaque, ranging from releases six to nine months in advance to unclear buying processes with incumbents in the space,” Hammer told TechCrunch. “Other platforms lack buyer intent … We have a true-sided marketplace.”

The startup launched at an opportune time, given that one of the largest players, Ticketmaster, is in hot water. Apart from being under fire for its excessively high service charges, the Department of Justice recently filed an antitrust lawsuit alleging monopolistic practices. The company also confirmed that it was hacked, resulting in a data breach and theft of personal information.

CrowdVolt has grown to over 3,000 active users across around 250 listed events.  

The platform is currently only available on the web, but the company plans to launch a mobile app in six months.

Stripe, secondaries, deal dive

Deal Dive: A Stripe secondary deal worth paying attention to

Stripe, secondaries, deal dive

Image Credits: Miguel Candela/SOPA Images/LightRocket / Getty Images

Venture capitalists and founders are hoping — praying? — for exits to pick back up in 2024. A recent TechCrunch+ survey found that there is consensus among VCs that exits will start to rebound this year, but the when and the how are still a bit fuzzy.

The consensus, though, is that fintech Stripe will go public this year. The investors surveyed clearly aren’t the only ones who are excited about a potential Stripe exit in 2024, either. According to secondary data tracker Caplight, there has been an absolute flurry of buyers looking to get shares in the company in recent months.

While bids tell us one thing, deals tell us another, and a closed transaction this week tells us a lot about what could happen to Stripe in 2024. On Tuesday, literally the day after New Year’s Day, a secondary sale closed that valued Stripe shares at $21.06 apiece; that values the startup at $53.65 billion, according to Caplight data.

Stripe declined to comment.

There are a few reasons why this deal is worth paying attention to. For one, Stripe’s $53 billion value marks an increase from the company’s most recent primary round last March, when Stripe was valued at $50 billion.

Sure, you could say what’s a $3 billion valuation increase between friends, regarding a company that was worth nearly $100 billion at the beginning of 2022? I get it, but that increase is a bigger deal than its direct value.

For one, this secondary sale shows that investors think Stripe is growing its valuation again, which is a good sign for Stripe — obviously — but it’s also an anomaly compared to many other startups at that stage that aren’t AI companies or SpaceX, of course.

Back in December, I surveyed multiple secondary investors about the state of secondaries and where they were finding attractive opportunities. The thing they all agreed on is that the majority of high-flying startups from the peak of the market frenzy in 2021 still needed to lower their valuation to be attractive.

More than 40 investors share their top predictions for 2024

So a startup like Stripe — which did slash its valuation 52% in 2023 — getting a flurry of activity shows that investors likely think it is properly valued and ready to start growing again.

Investors looking to buy shares at this growing valuation is also a good sign of a potential IPO to come. Back in March, I spoke with a handful of secondaries investors — yeah, I’m pretty much always talking to these folks — on how we could use secondary deal information to track and predict when companies were going to go public. They told me that if any of these overvalued late-stage startups wanted to have a successful IPO, they’d need to slash their valuation and give investors the opportunity to drum up interest — and their position in the company — before going out. Well, that’s exactly what is happening with this Stripe deal.

By looking at who’s buying the shares on the secondary market, you can often tell whether the company will go public sooner rather than later. If it’s a large crossover investor or someone who largely invests in public stocks, like T. Rowe Price or Fidelity, that’s another positive signal that an IPO is just over the horizon. We don’t have that data for Stripe, but it’s worth keeping in mind.

While of course I can’t guarantee that Stripe will be one of the first IPOs in 2024, it shows that the company is ready. And if that does happen, I think Stripe could be the perfect public listing to revive the late-stage venture market and defrost the exit environment.

A good exit from Stripe would show that there is exit hope for the startups that got overvalued in 2021 but were built on solid fundamentals. Plus, I’d imagine that any late-stage investor who is able to hold their shares after Stripe goes public wouldn’t be looking at as big of a loss as it may seem now.

And even if Stripe doesn’t go public anytime soon, this deal shows us that investors are picking their winners from 2021 and that the market may see some growth again.

Henry Ward

Carta exits secondary trading following credibility hit

Henry Ward

Image Credits: Carta

Roughly 72 hours after a prominent startup customer complained that Carta was misusing information with which it was entrusted — scaring many of Carta’s tens of thousands of other customers in the process — Carta is exiting the business that landed it in trouble with the customer.

Carta co-founder and CEO Henry Ward posted on Medium tonight that: “Because we have the data, if we are trading secondaries, people will always worry that we are using the data, even if we are not. So we have decided to prioritize trust, and exit the secondary trading business.”

It’s a dramatic turn of events for 14-year-old Carta, which originally focused on cap table management software but began over time to evolve into a “private stock market for companies” to take advantage of the network of companies and investors that already use its platform and into which it has insights. The big idea was to become the transfer agent, brokerage and clearinghouse for all private stock transactions in the world.

While the move made Carta more valuable in the eyes of its venture backers — a company has to scale, after all! — it put the company on dangerous footing after Finnish CEO Karri Saarinen posted on LinkedIn on Friday that Carta was using information about his company’s investor base to try to sell its shares to outside buyers without the company’s knowledge or consent.

Wrote Saarinen, whose project management software company Linear is four years old and a Carta customer:  “As a founder it feels kind [of] shitty that Carta, who I trust to manage our cap table, is now doing cold outreach to our angel investors about selling Linear shares to their non disclosed buyers.” Saarinen continued: “They never contacted us (their customer) about starting an order book for Linear shares. The investor they reached out to is a family member whose investment we never published anywhere. We and they never opted in to any kind of secondary sales. Yet Carta Liquidity found their email and knew that they owned Linear shares.”

While Ward apologized publicly to Saarinen, blaming a rogue employee who “violated our internal procedures and went out of bounds reaching out to customers they shouldn’t have,” Saarinen continued the discussion very publicly, saying he had identified numerous other founders whose investors had also been contacted by Carta representatives without their knowledge.

In his post tonight, Ward downplayed the impacts of ending secondary trading on Carta, saying the revenue derived from the practice is minuscule compared with Carta’s other business offerings. According to Ward, Carta’s cap table business “is about $250M/year, fund administration is about $100M, private equity is about $20M, and the secondary trading business is about $3M.” Carta, he added, has done a “decent job of building the cap table business, an ok job at fund admin (but feeling the growing pains), and an abysmal job at the secondary business.”

Further, he continued, having precious customer data that others do not isn’t the superpower that outsiders may think — certainly not if Carta is going to be a good actor in the private company ecosystem.

Ward, widely known to be brusque, strikes an uncharacteristically humble tone in the Medium post, writing, “ALL of my ideas around liquidity — auctions, investor matching, secondary trading, open tender offers, have not worked. I might not be the entrepreneur that can solve this problem.” Indeed, he continued, “Carta might not be the company that can solve this problem. Many people think we are best poised to solve liquidity because we have cap table data. But that same argument is used for data products. People say ‘You have all the data so you should put Pitchbook out of business!’ But it is precisely because we have the data, that we can’t use it. It is our customers’ data, not ours. That’s why in ten years, Carta has never released a data product. I use Pitchbook and TechCrunch when I research a company before I meet the CEO.”

“Having ground truth data is not an advantage if we can’t use it. And it is a disadvantage if people think we use it,” added Ward.

To Carta’s credit, the decision to back out of the secondary sales business came quickly; Carta also seemed to have little choice, with many founders threatening to move their startups’ business elsewhere after the events of this past weekend.

As founder Sim Desai of the financial services startup Hiive wrote on LinkedIn yesterday, [A]side from [Carta’s] apparent breach of trust (possible to fix) and their lack of expertise (hard to fix), Carta faces another impossible conflict between these two business models. Even if they are not using their customers’ confidential information, it is the optics of a potential breach that will stand in the way.”

How the move impacts Carta’s own valuation remains to be seen, as does whether the company sticks to its guns once the startup market rebounds — along with demand for secondary shares.

In the meantime, if you missed the row with Linear that set tongues wagging over the weekend, you can read our earlier coverage here.

Stripe, secondaries, deal dive

Deal Dive: A Stripe secondary deal worth paying attention to

Stripe, secondaries, deal dive

Image Credits: Miguel Candela/SOPA Images/LightRocket / Getty Images

Venture capitalists and founders are hoping — praying? — for exits to pick back up in 2024. A recent TechCrunch+ survey found that there is consensus among VCs that exits will start to rebound this year, but the when and the how are still a bit fuzzy.

The consensus, though, is that fintech Stripe will go public this year. The investors surveyed clearly aren’t the only ones who are excited about a potential Stripe exit in 2024, either. According to secondary data tracker Caplight, there has been an absolute flurry of buyers looking to get shares in the company in recent months.

While bids tell us one thing, deals tell us another, and a closed transaction this week tells us a lot about what could happen to Stripe in 2024. On Tuesday, literally the day after New Year’s Day, a secondary sale closed that valued Stripe shares at $21.06 apiece; that values the startup at $53.65 billion, according to Caplight data.

Stripe declined to comment.

There are a few reasons why this deal is worth paying attention to. For one, Stripe’s $53 billion value marks an increase from the company’s most recent primary round last March, when Stripe was valued at $50 billion.

Sure, you could say what’s a $3 billion valuation increase between friends, regarding a company that was worth nearly $100 billion at the beginning of 2022? I get it, but that increase is a bigger deal than its direct value.

For one, this secondary sale shows that investors think Stripe is growing its valuation again, which is a good sign for Stripe — obviously — but it’s also an anomaly compared to many other startups at that stage that aren’t AI companies or SpaceX, of course.

Back in December, I surveyed multiple secondary investors about the state of secondaries and where they were finding attractive opportunities. The thing they all agreed on is that the majority of high-flying startups from the peak of the market frenzy in 2021 still needed to lower their valuation to be attractive.

More than 40 investors share their top predictions for 2024

So a startup like Stripe — which did slash its valuation 52% in 2023 — getting a flurry of activity shows that investors likely think it is properly valued and ready to start growing again.

Investors looking to buy shares at this growing valuation is also a good sign of a potential IPO to come. Back in March, I spoke with a handful of secondaries investors — yeah, I’m pretty much always talking to these folks — on how we could use secondary deal information to track and predict when companies were going to go public. They told me that if any of these overvalued late-stage startups wanted to have a successful IPO, they’d need to slash their valuation and give investors the opportunity to drum up interest — and their position in the company — before going out. Well, that’s exactly what is happening with this Stripe deal.

By looking at who’s buying the shares on the secondary market, you can often tell whether the company will go public sooner rather than later. If it’s a large crossover investor or someone who largely invests in public stocks, like T. Rowe Price or Fidelity, that’s another positive signal that an IPO is just over the horizon. We don’t have that data for Stripe, but it’s worth keeping in mind.

While of course I can’t guarantee that Stripe will be one of the first IPOs in 2024, it shows that the company is ready. And if that does happen, I think Stripe could be the perfect public listing to revive the late-stage venture market and defrost the exit environment.

A good exit from Stripe would show that there is exit hope for the startups that got overvalued in 2021 but were built on solid fundamentals. Plus, I’d imagine that any late-stage investor who is able to hold their shares after Stripe goes public wouldn’t be looking at as big of a loss as it may seem now.

And even if Stripe doesn’t go public anytime soon, this deal shows us that investors are picking their winners from 2021 and that the market may see some growth again.

Henry Ward

Carta exits secondary trading following credibility hit

Henry Ward

Image Credits: Carta

Roughly 72 hours after a prominent startup customer complained that Carta was misusing information with which it was entrusted — scaring many of Carta’s tens of thousands of other customers in the process — Carta is exiting the business that landed it in trouble with the customer.

Carta co-founder and CEO Henry Ward posted on Medium tonight that: “Because we have the data, if we are trading secondaries, people will always worry that we are using the data, even if we are not. So we have decided to prioritize trust, and exit the secondary trading business.”

It’s a dramatic turn of events for 14-year-old Carta, which originally focused on cap table management software but began over time to evolve into a “private stock market for companies” to take advantage of the network of companies and investors that already use its platform and into which it has insights. The big idea was to become the transfer agent, brokerage and clearinghouse for all private stock transactions in the world.

While the move made Carta more valuable in the eyes of its venture backers — a company has to scale, after all! — it put the company on dangerous footing after Finnish CEO Karri Saarinen posted on LinkedIn on Friday that Carta was using information about his company’s investor base to try to sell its shares to outside buyers without the company’s knowledge or consent.

Wrote Saarinen, whose project management software company Linear is four years old and a Carta customer:  “As a founder it feels kind [of] shitty that Carta, who I trust to manage our cap table, is now doing cold outreach to our angel investors about selling Linear shares to their non disclosed buyers.” Saarinen continued: “They never contacted us (their customer) about starting an order book for Linear shares. The investor they reached out to is a family member whose investment we never published anywhere. We and they never opted in to any kind of secondary sales. Yet Carta Liquidity found their email and knew that they owned Linear shares.”

While Ward apologized publicly to Saarinen, blaming a rogue employee who “violated our internal procedures and went out of bounds reaching out to customers they shouldn’t have,” Saarinen continued the discussion very publicly, saying he had identified numerous other founders whose investors had also been contacted by Carta representatives without their knowledge.

In his post tonight, Ward downplayed the impacts of ending secondary trading on Carta, saying the revenue derived from the practice is minuscule compared with Carta’s other business offerings. According to Ward, Carta’s cap table business “is about $250M/year, fund administration is about $100M, private equity is about $20M, and the secondary trading business is about $3M.” Carta, he added, has done a “decent job of building the cap table business, an ok job at fund admin (but feeling the growing pains), and an abysmal job at the secondary business.”

Further, he continued, having precious customer data that others do not isn’t the superpower that outsiders may think — certainly not if Carta is going to be a good actor in the private company ecosystem.

Ward, widely known to be brusque, strikes an uncharacteristically humble tone in the Medium post, writing, “ALL of my ideas around liquidity — auctions, investor matching, secondary trading, open tender offers, have not worked. I might not be the entrepreneur that can solve this problem.” Indeed, he continued, “Carta might not be the company that can solve this problem. Many people think we are best poised to solve liquidity because we have cap table data. But that same argument is used for data products. People say ‘You have all the data so you should put Pitchbook out of business!’ But it is precisely because we have the data, that we can’t use it. It is our customers’ data, not ours. That’s why in ten years, Carta has never released a data product. I use Pitchbook and TechCrunch when I research a company before I meet the CEO.”

“Having ground truth data is not an advantage if we can’t use it. And it is a disadvantage if people think we use it,” added Ward.

To Carta’s credit, the decision to back out of the secondary sales business came quickly; Carta also seemed to have little choice, with many founders threatening to move their startups’ business elsewhere after the events of this past weekend.

As founder Sim Desai of the financial services startup Hiive wrote on LinkedIn yesterday, [A]side from [Carta’s] apparent breach of trust (possible to fix) and their lack of expertise (hard to fix), Carta faces another impossible conflict between these two business models. Even if they are not using their customers’ confidential information, it is the optics of a potential breach that will stand in the way.”

How the move impacts Carta’s own valuation remains to be seen, as does whether the company sticks to its guns once the startup market rebounds — along with demand for secondary shares.

In the meantime, if you missed the row with Linear that set tongues wagging over the weekend, you can read our earlier coverage here.