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Marcelo Claure to leave SoftBank as the ‘great resignation’ keeps hitting VC

SoftBank COO Marcelo Claure plans to step down from the Japanese investor over a compensation dispute in what would be the latest in a string of exits from VC firms.

Marcelo Claure plans to step down as COO of SoftBank. (Andreas Rentz/Getty Images)


SoftBank COO Marcelo Claure is in negotiations to resign from the Japanese investor over a compensation dispute, according to reports. The departure would be the latest in a string of high-profile exits from SoftBank and other VC firms.

  • At SoftBank, Claure has been a towering figure. He oversaw the turnaround and sale of Sprint, led SoftBank’s investment push into Latin America, and took over WeWork following founder Adam Neumann’s departure. Claure had sought $2 billion in compensation over several years, but was denied by CEO Masayoshi Son, The New York Times reported in December.
  • The Japanese conglomerate has had a string of high-profile departures from its investment group. Jeff Housenbold, who led SoftBank’s investments in DoorDash, Opendoor and Rappi, left a year ago. Then Deep Nishar, one of the top leaders at the Vision Fund, left the company at the end of the year to join General Catalyst.
  • Michel Combes, who currently serves as president of SoftBank Group International, will take over Claure’s duties running the group, according to reports.
  • Other notable recent VC departures include Katie Haun, who left her post as a partner at Andreessen Horowitz to launch a crypto fund in December. Last week, Amy Wu left Lightspeed to lead FTX‘s $2 billion venture fund.
  • Demand for venture capitalists at all levels has increased recently amid record capital amounts that were poured into the industry last year.

The VC industry has become increasingly fragmented amid record fundraising, which has created fresh opportunities for investors to strike out on their own. First-time fundraising, which dropped steeply in 2020, rebounded in 2021 with $9.1 billion raised across 172 funds, according to the latest PitchBook-NVCA Venture Monitor. Meanwhile, solo VCs have gained influence with ever-larger funds and an ability to deploy capital quickly.

  • james-thorne.jpg
    About James Thorne
    James Thorne is a Seattle-based managing editor overseeing PitchBook’s venture capital coverage and data journalism initiatives. He previously reported for GeekWire, Reuters, CNBC and Source Media. A native of Colorado, James graduated from Boston College and received his master’s degree in business journalism from New York University.
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    About Marina Temkin
    Marina Temkin covered the venture capital ecosystem from 2021 to 2024, based in San Francisco. Previously with Venture Capital Journal, Marina wrote about the VC industry, and she was a reporter with Mergermarket in New York and San Francisco. She also has been a financial analyst and is a CFA charterholder. Marina received an economics degree from the University of California, Davis, and she attended the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism.
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