Goldman Sachs did not wake up one morning and decide to buy a venture firm. This was a relationship that aged in public and matured in private. On January 5, 2026, Goldman Sachs completed its acquisition of Industry Ventures, a SF firm born out of a Russian Hill condo at the exact moment the dot-com bubble collapsed. Timing mattered then. It matters now. Venture liquidity is tight, exits are delayed, and secondaries are no longer a side door. They are the front entrance.

Industry Ventures was founded in 2000 by Hans Swildens, long before venture secondaries had a name anyone respected. While others chased velocity, this platform learned patience, buying LP interests and founder shares when liquidity was scarce and judgment mattered. 25 years later, that discipline shows up clean in the numbers. $7B+ under supervision. Exposure to 5,500+ venture-backed companies. Net performance around 18% IRR with a 2.2x multiple. This was never about hype. It was about math, timing, and knowing who needed a buyer when no one else raised a hand.

The deal structure tells you Goldman Sachs understood exactly what it bought. $665M upfront in cash and equity, with up to $300M more tied to performance through 2030. Not a victory lap. A bet on execution. Petershill Partners exits its minority stake. All 45 employees move over. No carve-outs, no musical chairs. Continuity wins. Hans Swildens, Justin Burden, and Roland Reynolds step in as Partners within Goldman Sachs Asset Management, operating inside the External Investing Group, where venture, growth, and secondaries now share oxygen instead of competing for it.

This is not Goldman Sachs dabbling. This plugs a venture-pure engine directly into a $576B alternatives platform. Venture secondaries. Tech buyouts. Primary fund seeding. A full lifecycle view of private company ownership at a moment when IPOs are optional and M&A is the default. Industry Ventures built its edge on the idea that liquidity is a strategy, not an outcome. Goldman Sachs just institutionalized that idea at global scale.

There is wordplay baked into the name for a reason. This is Industry, plural. Venture funds. Founders. LPs. Employees. All looking for movement in a market that has been standing still. Goldman Sachs did not buy a trend. It bought a mechanism.

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