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CommentaryVenture Capital

Unicorns are flush with cash and stuck. A new kind of startup crisis is taking hold in 2026

By
David Spreng
David Spreng
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By
David Spreng
David Spreng
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March 20, 2026, 9:10 AM ET

David Spreng is the founder and CEO of Runway Growth Capital and chairs the firm's investment committee. With 30 years of experience as a venture capitalist and growth debt lender, he has helped form and develop nearly 50 technology companies.

spreng
David Spreng is the founder and CEO of Runway Growth Capital.courtesy of Runway Growth Capital

Some of the most valuable private companies in the world right now have a problem that has nothing to do with their product, their team, or their market. They have too many investors, too many competing agendas, and a cap table — the record of who owns what and under what terms — that has become so layered with complexity that it is actively preventing them from moving forward. Call it cap table gridlock: the condition where a company’s ownership structure becomes the constraint on its growth, rather than capital itself.

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Cap table gridlock isn’t a new concept. Founders have always had to balance investor expectations, dilution, and governance. What is new is how pronounced the problem has become, driven by three structural shifts: the concentration of venture capital into fewer, larger companies; the dominance of mega-rounds; and the continued extension of private-company lifecycles as IPO and M&A timelines stretch.

Recent data from Crunchbase underscores this reality. In 2025, a small handful of AI companies raised an outsized share of total venture dollars, while a significant majority of capital flowed into $100 million-plus rounds. AI alone accounted for nearly half of global venture funding. The result is a late-stage ecosystem defined less by broad participation and more by scale, concentration, and complexity.

For founders, that complexity shows up most acutely on the cap table.

Large startups today often carry multiple classes of preferred equity, layered liquidation preferences, bespoke investor rights, and shareholders with very different time horizons. Some investors are underwriting long-term category dominance. Others are seeking liquidity. Still others are managing portfolio exposure after years of extended private markets. When companies stay private longer — as many are choosing or being forced to do — those competing incentives compound.

The practical consequence is gridlock. Companies still need capital to grow and invest — but raising traditional equity can reopen valuation debates that no longer reflect operating fundamentals, trigger dilution that disproportionately impacts certain stakeholders, and intensify misalignment among investors who agree on the company’s promise but disagree on timing, structure, or risk. What once might have been an uncomfortable board conversation becomes a strategic impasse.

In some cases, that impasse goes beyond financing. A single shareholder or class of shares may hold blocking rights that can delay or prevent a sale at what management, the board, and the majority of investors view as an optimal time. When incentives diverge, governance provisions designed to protect stakeholders can instead constrain strategic flexibility. Gridlock stops being a financing problem and becomes an exit problem.

This dynamic is particularly visible among large, capital-intensive companies. These businesses require enormous upfront investment, often well ahead of predictable revenue. They also command valuations that make repricing difficult without signaling weakness or inviting unnecessary scrutiny. As IPOs are delayed and private markets absorb more of the growth lifecycle, founders are being asked to solve a problem that neither traditional venture equity nor private debt were designed to address on their own.

Structured equity — financing that sits between traditional venture equity and straight debt, often with flexible terms designed to avoid repricing the entire equity stack — is gaining attention because it offers flexibility in a market where flexibility is increasingly scarce. When designed thoughtfully, it can provide growth or bridge financing without forcing a wholesale repricing of existing equity, helping companies extend runway, fund expansion, or manage liquidity needs while preserving alignment across stakeholders.

The capital markets founders operate in today are structurally different from those of 2018 or even 2021 — capital is concentrating into fewer companies, mega-rounds are layering complexity onto cap tables, and the path to public markets is no longer linear or time-bound. The tools designed for faster IPO cycles and less concentrated markets are not fit for purpose in a world where private companies routinely remain private for a decade or more.

Some might argue that companies should simply raise equity at lower valuations, tighten spending, or wait for public markets to reopen. In some cases, that may be the right answer. But for many large startups, those options carry real tradeoffs — sacrificing momentum in winner-take-most markets, destabilizing governance at critical moments, or deferring necessary investment in the hope that timing improves.

The more interesting question is not whether structured equity replaces traditional venture capital — it doesn’t — but whether founders have access to a broader set of capital strategies that reflect the realities of modern growth companies.

Cap table gridlock is emerging as one of the defining challenges for unicorns in 2026 precisely because it sits at the intersection of success and constraint. These are not struggling businesses — they are often category leaders with strong demand, ambitious roadmaps, and long runways ahead. But their scale and longevity in private markets have introduced frictions that founders must now actively manage.

As capital continues to concentrate and private timelines extend, those frictions will only become more common. The founders who navigate this era successfully will be the ones who treat capital structure as a strategic tool — one that requires as much deliberate thought as product, hiring, or go-to-market. The cap table isn’t just a financial document. In 2026, it’s a leadership challenge.

The opinions expressed in Fortune.com commentary pieces are solely the views of their authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions and beliefs of Fortune.

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