Corgi, a business-insurance startup that sells coverage to other startups, announced on May 28 a $106 million Series B1 round that values it at $2.6 billion. The raise landed just three weeks after the company disclosed a $160 million Series B at a $1.3 billion valuation — itself only four months after a $108 million Series A. In the space of a few weeks, on paper, the company became twice as valuable.
That sequence is what makes the deal worth a second look. Back-to-back rounds at higher prices are common in the current market, but a valuation that doubles in three weeks is unusual — and, as TechCrunch reported, it is more unusual still because much of the same investor group backed both rounds.
The same backers, a bigger number
Corgi’s earlier $160 million round was led by TCV, with Kindred Ventures, Leblon Capital and First Order Fund among the other investors. When the $2.6 billion round followed weeks later, the investor list again included Kindred and Leblon, alongside Prime Capital, Alumni Ventures and Y Combinator. Founded in 2024 by Emily Yuan and Nico Laqua, Corgi came out of Y Combinator’s spring 2024 batch and counts Deel and Artisan among its customers.
Asked what had changed in three weeks to justify doubling the price, Kindred Ventures’ Kanyi Maqubela pointed to the company’s momentum, and specifically to revenue growth. He framed the step-up as a reflection of the business rather than financial engineering. “LPs really like exits above all,” he told TechCrunch. “They discount the value of markups since those aren’t always reflective of reality.”
Why “internal markups” make some investors nervous
That last point gestures at the mechanic underneath the story. When a venture fund invests at one valuation and then participates in a new round at a higher valuation soon after, it marks up the value of its own existing stake. The fund’s portfolio looks more valuable, and its paper returns improve — without any sale, and without outside money setting an independent price.
The practice is drawing scrutiny in the world of limited partners, the pensions, endowments and family offices whose money sits inside venture funds. “There’s growing distrust of internal markups,” one limited partner who backs numerous venture funds told TechCrunch, speaking anonymously. The same investor added that when “a company [is] just getting re-priced upward with no real liquidity event, LPs notice.” The worry is straightforward: a markup can make a fund’s performance look stronger than the underlying companies justify, until a sale or public listing tests the number against real demand.
Corgi’s case for the step-up
Corgi and its backers argue the round is grounded in the business, not the optics. Maqubela said the markup is not a concern for Kindred’s limited partners or for Corgi’s other investors, and that revenue growth rationalized the new valuation. Laqua, the co-founder, said insurance is a “highly capital-intensive industry” and that “demand has accelerated quickly across new product lines and partnerships,” with the cost of building an AI-native underwriting platform adding to the capital needs.
The company sells general, cyber, and technology and AI liability coverage, pitching itself at risks that legacy carriers handle awkwardly or exclude. “Corgi covers anything from when an AI system causes financial loss, misinformation, operational failures, or compliance issues,” Laqua said, arguing that many older policies treat those exposures ambiguously. The new capital, he said, will go toward new insurance lines, scaling the underwriting platform, embedded distribution partnerships and hiring. Corgi has now raised $378 million in total, according to TechCrunch, and is one of a cluster of venture-backed insurtechs — Y Combinator-backed Vouch among them — chasing the same startup customers.
What the numbers do and don’t show
A private funding round is a negotiated price between a company and a small set of investors, not a figure set by an open market. A markup is a higher agreed price, not realized cash; until a company is sold or goes public, the gain exists on paper. None of that is unique to Corgi, and none of it is evidence that anything improper happened here. The limited partner quoted by TechCrunch was describing a general unease about a widespread practice, not making a specific allegation about this company, and Corgi’s investors say revenue growth supports the number.
Equally, the rebuttal rests on figures that outsiders cannot independently check. Corgi’s revenue growth, the detail that its backers say justifies the jump, has not been disclosed publicly, so the case for the valuation has to be taken partly on trust. The reported totals carry their own small imprecision, too: the three announced rounds add up to about $374 million, a little short of the $378 million total cited, which suggests an earlier, smaller raise or rounding rather than a contradiction. What the episode illustrates best is not a verdict on one startup but a tension running through a frothy private market — between the prices funds report to their own investors and the prices a buyer would actually pay.
For now, the only hard number is the one on the term sheet. Whether $2.6 billion turns out to be the floor or the ceiling depends on a sale or a listing that has not happened yet.


















