Y Combinator president Sam Altman is stepping down amid a series of changes at the accelerator

Sam Altman, the well-known president of the prolific Silicon Valley accelerator Y Combinator, is stepping down, the firm shared in a blog post on Friday.

Altman is transitioning into a chairman role with other YC partners stepping up to take on his day-to-day responsibilities, as first reported by Axios. Sources tell TechCrunch YC has no succession plans. YCโ€™s core program is currently led by chief executive officer Michael Seibel, who joined the firm as a part-time partner in 2013 and assumed the top role in 2016.

The news comes amid a series of shake-ups at the accelerator, which is expected to demo its latest batch of 200-plus companies in San Francisco March 18 and 19. In Fridayโ€™s blog post, YC expands on some of those changes, including the firmโ€™s decision to move its HQ to San Francisco, which TechCrunch reported earlier this week.

โ€œWe are considering moving YC to the city and are currently looking for space,โ€ YC writes. โ€œThe center of gravity for new startups has clearly shifted over the past five years, and although we love our space in Mountain View, we are rethinking whether the logistical tradeoff is worth it, especially given how difficult the commute has become. We also want to be closer to our Bay Area alumni, who disproportionately live and work in San Francisco.โ€

In addition to moving its HQ up north, YC has greatly expanded the size of its cohorts โ€” so much so that its next demo day will have two stages โ€” and itโ€™s writing larger checks to portfolio companies.

Altman, who joined YC as a partner in 2011 and was named president in 2014, will focus on other efforts, including OpenAI, a research organization in which he co-chairs. Altman was the second-ever YC president, succeeding YC co-founder Paul Graham in 2014. Graham is currently an advisor to YC.

The Silicon Valley exodus continues

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FirstClub
Image Credits:FirstClub
Commerce

Quick commerce FirstClub doubles valuation to $255M in nine months

In a quick-commerce market obsessed with speed, Indian startup FirstClub has convinced investors that quality may be a fresh opportunity, helping to double its valuation just nine months after its last funding round.

The Bengaluru-based startup has raised $55 million in a Series B round co-led by Peak XV Partners and Sofina, valuing the company at $255 million after the investment. Thatโ€™s up from $120 million when it last raised capital in September 2025. Existing investors Accel, RTP Global, and Paramark Ventures also participated. The latest financing brings FirstClubโ€™s total funding to $86 million.

As grocery shopping increasingly moves online, Indiaโ€™s quick-commerce market has expanded rapidly, growing from about $6.2 billion in FY25 to an estimated $11 billion-$12 billion in FY26, according to a recent ICICI Securities report. Leading players have popularized online grocery shopping through ever-faster deliveries. However, FirstClub is wagering that a growing segment of consumers will prioritize quality and product curation over receiving orders as quickly as possible.

Founded in 2024 by former Flipkart executive Ayyappan R, FirstClub operates a curated online grocery platform that offers around 4,000 products โ€” roughly a third of the assortment carried by many quick-commerce rivals. The startup says it conducts quality checks on fresh produce, lab-tests certain staples, and works with brands to develop exclusive products, as it seeks to position itself as a trusted destination for groceries rather than a fast-delivery service.

โ€œPeople donโ€™t need a very large selection, but they need the right quality selection, consistently delivered every single time,โ€ Ayyappan said in an interview.

FirstClub says more than 60% of its customer base consists of women-led households. Unlike many quick-commerce platforms, where staples such as onions, tomatoes, and potatoes dominate sales, Ayyappan said some of FirstClubโ€™s top-selling products include avocados, persimmons, and Modi apples, reflecting demand for premium and curated grocery offerings.

The strategy appears to be resonating with early shoppers. FirstClub says it has crossed 1 million orders and acquired 170,000 households within a year of launching in Bengaluru.

The startup is currently operating at an annualized gross market value (meaning total of all goods sold on its platform) of about $50 million, with customers placing more than four orders a month on average and spending roughly โ‚น1,200 (about $13) per order, Ayyappan told TechCrunch.

FirstClub plans to use the fresh capital to expand beyond Bengaluru, where it currently operates 21 stores, and deepen its presence in Hyderabad, where it recently launched with three locations. The startup, which employs about 220 people directly, also plans to expand into categories including home and kitchen products, gifting, and other household essentials.

Peak XV Managing Director GV Ravishankar said the firm believes India is seeing the emergence of a larger cohort of affluent, health-conscious consumers willing to pay for higher-quality products, creating space for specialized grocery platforms alongside mainstream quick-commerce players.

โ€œThere will be a specific set of consumers who gravitate toward a better-quality platform that serves trustworthy products,โ€ Ravishankar told TechCrunch. โ€œAs Indians become wealthier and more informed, there will be more and more people who make that choice.โ€

Ravishankar compared the trend to the rise of premium grocery chains in developed markets, arguing that Indiaโ€™s retail landscape is beginning to fragment beyond a one-size-fits-all approach centered on price and convenience.

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Anton Osika, co-founder & CEO at Lovable
Image Credits:Bruno de Carvalho/SOPA Images/LightRocket / Getty Images
AI

Lovable signs multiyear deal with Google Cloud to up usage 5x, source says

Lovable and Google announced an expanded multiyear collaboration on Wednesday. Lovable, the fast-growing Stockholm vibe-coding startup, has long been a Google Cloud user. Under the new agreement, it will be a much bigger one.

While the companies did not disclose the dollar figure, a person with knowledge of the deal tells TechCrunch it involves a fivefold increase in Lovableโ€™s footprint on Google Cloud, including AI usage. As part of the deal, this individual tells us, Lovable will gain expanded access to both Anthropicโ€™s Claude โ€” the AI model widely used for coding tasks โ€” and Googleโ€™s own Gemini models.

The Anthropic piece in particular is interesting. Google invested $10 billion in Anthropic in cash and compute credits in April, promising another $30 billion if Anthropic hits certain performance targets. It made that investment at a $350 billion valuation โ€” just one month before Anthropic raised a staggering $65 billion round that valued the company at nearly $1 trillion. This deal stands to help Anthropic hit those targets, because Lovable is one of Europeโ€™s fastest-growing startups on record. According to Lovable, it crossed $400 million in annualized revenue in February, having added $100 million in a single month with just 146 employees. The company claims that more than half of Fortune 500 companies use its product in some fashion.

The deal also plugs Lovable into several other parts of Googleโ€™s ecosystem. Lovableโ€™s new agent will be available through Google Cloudโ€™s enterprise agent marketplace, the Gemini Enterprise Agent Gallery โ€” an arrangement the two companies first telegraphed at Googleโ€™s major U.S. cloud conference in April. And to help secure the code that both humans and agents write, Lovable will integrate with Wiz, Googleโ€™s biggest ever acquisition at $32 billion, which officially closed in March, a year after it was announced. The integration will allow Wiz to identify and remediate security problems in real time.

By selling Lovableโ€™s agents through Googleโ€™s marketplace, the cloud giant says enterprise procurement and billing will be simplified, making it easier for Lovable to land more enterprise customers.

The calculus for Google is simple enough. If it can keep both Lovable and Anthropic growing by attracting deep-pocketed enterprises, the revenue helps fund the $180 billion to $190 billion in capital expenditures Google plans to spend this year. The company is already in the process of selling a record-breaking $85 billion in equity to cover some of that, so only another $100 billion or so to go.

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