Peak XV Partners has acknowledged that internal disagreements led to recent partner exits, while reaffirming its commitment to an AI-focused investment strategy.
Peak XV Partners has publicly addressed a wave of senior partner exits, stating that internal disagreements — rather than external pressures — were the primary reason behind the departures, as the firm accelerates its push into artificial intelligence.
The comments mark one of the clearest acknowledgements yet from the India- and Southeast Asia–focused venture capital firm regarding leadership churn following its rebranding from Sequoia Capital India & SEA.
A rare admission
In venture capital, partner departures are often framed as natural transitions. Peak XV’s decision to explicitly cite internal disagreements signals a more candid approach — and reflects the strategic inflection point the firm is navigating.
The disagreements, according to the firm, were tied to differences in long-term vision, investment focus, and operating priorities as Peak XV recalibrates for the next decade.
Why AI is central to the reset
Peak XV has made artificial intelligence a core pillar of its forward strategy, arguing that AI represents a once-in-a-generation platform shift comparable to mobile or cloud computing.
The firm is increasingly concentrating capital on:
- AI-first SaaS companies
- Applied AI in enterprise and fintech
- Infrastructure and tooling supporting AI deployment
This sharper focus may not have aligned with all partners, particularly those whose expertise lay in consumer, marketplace, or capital-intensive sectors.
From generalist to conviction-led
Historically, Sequoia India operated as a broad-based generalist fund. The transition to Peak XV has coincided with a more conviction-driven approach, where fewer themes receive deeper capital and operational support.
Such shifts often create tension inside mature firms, especially when partners have built track records in sectors now receiving less emphasis.
Impact on founders and LPs

For founders, leadership changes can raise concerns about continuity. Peak XV has sought to reassure portfolio companies that:
- Investment pace remains steady
- Existing commitments will be honored
- AI is an additive focus, not an exclusive one
Limited partners, meanwhile, are watching closely to assess whether the firm’s AI-heavy strategy delivers differentiated returns in an increasingly crowded global market.
A broader VC pattern
Peak XV is not alone. Across global venture capital, large platforms are seeing senior partners spin out to form smaller funds, often citing a desire for:
- More autonomy
- Narrower sector focus
- Hands-on engagement
India’s venture ecosystem has matured to a point where first-time funds led by experienced investors are increasingly viable.
The road ahead
Peak XV’s leadership has emphasized that disagreement is not dysfunction — but a natural byproduct of strategic evolution.
The firm now faces a critical execution phase: proving that its AI-first posture can generate category-defining companies while maintaining the institutional strengths that made Sequoia India dominant for over a decade.


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