Some firms announce momentum. Others quietly tune the machinery that keeps momentum honest. Uncork Capital just did the second. The Palo Alto and San Francisco seed firm is now officially running fund administration and fund forecasting on Carta, a decision that reads boring until you realize it sits at the exact intersection of discipline, scale, and survival in modern venture.
Uncork Capital is 21 years deep, which in venture time is multiple boom cycles, a few winters, and a long memory of what breaks first when markets tighten. Founded in 2004 by Jeff Clavier, the firm earned its reputation by staying close to founders when things were still fragile, underwritten more by conviction than consensus. That posture has not drifted. In April 2025, Uncork Capital raised $300M total, allocating $225M to Fund VIII and $75M to Plus IV, choosing calibrated pressure over headline chasing in a market that punished excess.
Operational decisions start to matter more when capital stacks grow heavier. By adopting Carta across its funds, Uncork Capital centralized how capital calls go out, how distributions come back, and how reserves get modeled before the market forces the conversation. Fund admin and fund forecasting are not vanity tools. They are the scoreboard, the replay booth, and the risk register all living in the same system.
The move lines up with leadership that values clarity over theater. Andy McLoughlin assumed the role of sole Managing Partner in 2025 after years building Huddle into a real enterprise business. Jeff Clavier transitioned into the Founding Partner seat with a longer horizon and fewer day to day distractions. Partners Susan Liu, Tripp Jones, and Amy Saper round out a bench that treats operational rigor as part of the product founders actually experience, not something delegated and forgotten.
Carta has spent the last decade embedding itself into the private markets plumbing most people never see until it leaks. Fund administration paired with forecasting is about fewer blind spots when conviction meets volatility. It is about knowing how far $225M actually stretches when follow ons stack up, and how $75M in opportunity capital behaves when winners separate early.
There is wordplay here if you want it. You do not uncork momentum unless you trust the bottle. You do not put your Carta on the table unless you are ready to show the math. This is not about noise. It is about staying sharp when the room gets loud and the margin for error drops below 1%.


