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Whatnot is worth $11.5 billion—and its sellers just hit one billion orders

Allie Garfinkle
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Allie Garfinkle
Allie Garfinkle
Term Sheet Editor
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Allie Garfinkle
By
Allie Garfinkle
Allie Garfinkle
Term Sheet Editor
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June 18, 2026, 5:59 AM ET
Whatnot cofounders Grant LaFontaine and Logan Head.
Whatnot cofounders Grant LaFontaine and Logan Head.Whatnot
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The first orders on Whatnot, in 2020, were Funko Pops, sold live by cofounder Grant LaFontaine. For the uninitiated: 

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“A Funko Pop is a vinyl bobblehead-like doll, generally built around various IP,” LaFontaine explained in a recent interview we did for a forthcoming Term Sheet podcast. “You can get a Star Wars Funko Pop, or your favorite football players… There’s basically a Funko Pop for anything you can think of.”

That very first Funko Pop-centered livestream was an experiment, and a successful one at that—with LaFontaine selling $5,000 in Funko Pops in a few hours that July 2020 evening. 

“We sold every Funko Pop we had, everything that was in the office,” said LaFontaine. “We had more in the house, but were so tired because it was 11 o’clock at night by that point. But we were very excited: it would have been more Funko Pops than I’d have been able to sell on eBay in a year.”

It was the beginning of a live commerce marketplace that, six years later, is one of tech’s sneakiest runaway successes. Whatnot—which in October raised a $225 million Series F, with an $11.5 billion valuation—has been in the midst of a serious growth spurt: The startup says it saw more than 20 million new accounts created over the last year, while the number of first-time buyers on the platform has grown year-over-year by 285%. On Whatnot, a universe of sellers converges, offering everything from Star Wars merchandise, designer handbags, and fresh fish. (Yes, you read that right—@efish_co, who’s based in San Diego and livestreams while he’s fishing, sends customers fresh seafood that they watched come from the Pacific Ocean.)

Now, a long way from one evening of Funko Pops, Whatnot’s sellers have crossed one billion orders, the company exclusively told Fortune. 

“It’s wild to comprehend, one billion orders is a lot of orders,” LaFontaine said. “The way the business is compounding today, the vast majority of those one billion orders has happened in the past six months.”

Whatnot’s rise amid the AI boom is counterintuitive not only because it bucks the trend, but because marketplace startups are famously difficult to build. For every Uber, there’s a vast graveyard of marketplace startups. Those companies often fell prey to tricky supply-and-demand dynamics, user retention challenges, and the essentially infinite number of things that can go wrong when your business depends on a wild world of humans thoughtfully and ethically transacting. But Whatnot also serves as a reminder of why the marketplace model retains its appeal: When it works, it really works. 

“Once you have a marketplace business and the experience is really good, it just gets better faster,” said LaFontaine. “In the past year, for instance, because we’ve added more categories, that means more and more people have things to go and purchase. They then have better and better experiences, and sellers have more of an audience they can potentially sell things to.”

The sellers have to do the actual shipping these days. So, if I sell Muppet tiki mugs (yes, these exist), I am, after all, the one with the tiki mugs. (The company says it supports sellers by negotiating directly with carriers to get the best possible shipping rates and bundling options.) When it comes to engendering trust at scale, LaFontaine believes the livestream format has made all the difference.

“If you look at live commerce, there’s actually much more accountability baked into it than any other format,” he said. “You’re on camera, you can see the item, and you know if someone’s doing something relatively shady. There’s also a bunch of other people, holding that person on camera accountable.”

When new hires join up, Whatnot shows a photo from 2020, back when LaFontaine and cofounder Logan Head were running the fledgling startup out of that rented house where they hosted the first livestream. 

“A big day or orders for us then was 30 orders,” LaFontaine said. “We were fulfilling our own inventory, so the living room was just full of boxes. And now, the average day on Whatnot, we do a couple million orders.”

Among those millions of orders every day: Pokémon cards, crystals, sneakers, coins, plants, and vintage toys. And, of course—as was true at the beginning—there’s still pretty much a Funko Pop for everything. 

Scoop… I was the first to report that Roelof Botha, former steward at Sequoia Capital, is joining the board of SpaceX less than a week after the company’s historic IPO. Botha has known Elon Musk since they worked together at PayPal in the dotcom era. More here.

We’re off for Juneteenth, have a wonderful weekend, and see you Monday,

Allie Garfinkle
X:
@agarfinks
Email: alexandra.garfinkle@fortune.com

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Joey Abrams curated the deals section of today’s newsletter. Subscribe here.

VENTURE CAPITAL

- Odyssey, a Palo Alto, Calif., and London, U.K.-based AI lab, raised $310 million in Series B funding. Natural Capital led the round and was joined by Amazon, AMD Ventures, GV, and others.

- Genspark.ai, a Palo Alto, Calif.-based developer of agentic AI for knowledge workers, raised $100 million in a Series B extension from Sozo Ventures, Korea Mirae Asset, UpHonest Capital, and others.

- Triveni Bio, a Watertown, Mass.-based biotech developing antibody therapies for immune and inflammatory diseases, raised $65 million in Series C funding. Ascenta Capital and Janus Henderson Investors led the round and were joined by Deep Track and existing investors.

- Conduct, a London, U.K.-based AI operating system for enterprise software, raised $60 million in Series A funding. Index Ventures and ICONIQ led the round and were joined by SAP and existing investors Creandum, Lucid Capital, and Booom.

- Vedana Therapeutics, a Seattle, Wash.-based developer of therapies for migraine prevention, raised $46 million in Series A funding. Westlake BioPartners and Canaan Partners led the round and were joined by Dawn Biopharma and Alexandria Venture Investments.

- Convey, a San Francisco-based enterprise AI platform that allows businesses to develop their own digital teammates, raised $38 million in Series A funding. a16z led the round and was joined by Khosla Ventures and Pear VC.

- Karta, a Miami, Fla.-based credit card designed for global travelers, raised $15 million in Series A funding. Galaxy Ventures led the round and was joined by Illuminate and existing investors.

- Clair Health, a San Francisco-based developer of a noninvasive continuous hormone monitor for women, raised $11.6 million in seed funding. Khosla Ventures led the round and was joined by a16z speedrun, Brydge Club, Treehub, and others.

- Clario, a Menlo Park, Calif.-based platform built to eliminate enterprise data ROT (redundant, obsolete, and trivial files), raised $6 million in seed funding. Preface Ventures led the round and was joined by Golden Sparrow, High Sage, Moment Ventures, Ridge Ventures, Transform VC, and others.

- Vali Health, a San Francisco-based developer of AI technology for the home care industry, raised $6 million in funding from Bonfire Ventures, Supernode, Comma Capital, and Jacquelyn Kung.

- PDKinematics, a Vilnius, Lithuania-based defense engineering company, raised €2 million ($2.3 million) in seed funding. Coinvest Capital and Iron Wolf Capital led the round and were joined by angel investors. 

PRIVATE EQUITY

- Arcline Investment Management agreed to acquire AstroNova, a West Warwick, R.I.-based data visualization technology company, for approximately $272 million in cash.

- Allvia, backed by Trinity Hunt Partners, acquired Smith Communication Partners, an Atlanta, Ga.-based management consulting firm. Financial terms were not disclosed.

- New Mountain Capital acquired a majority stake in Commonwealth Associates, a Jackson, Mich.-based power engineering firm. Financial terms were not disclosed.

- TPG agreed to acquire Waste Eliminator, a Gainesville, Ga.-based waste management company, and Liberty Waste Solutions, a Raleigh, N.C.-based waste and recycling solutions company. Financial terms were not disclosed.

IPOS

- Csquare, a Coppell, Texas-based data center operator, filed to go public on the New York Stock Exchange. The company posted $1 billion in sales for the year ended March 31. Brookfield Corporation backs the company.

This is the web version of Term Sheet, a daily newsletter on the biggest deals and dealmakers in venture capital and private equity. Sign up for free.
About the Author
Allie Garfinkle
By Allie GarfinkleTerm Sheet Editor
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Allie Garfinkle is a senior writer and editor at Fortune, where she runs Term Sheet; leads coverage of private capital, investors, and startups; and co-chairs the Brainstorm conference series.

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