
Bennett Siegel
Co-founder and General Partner at A*, an early-stage venture capital firm backing outlier founders from idea to IPO. He previously was a Partner at Coatue Management and worked in private equity at Altamont Capital Partners and consulting at Boston Consulting Group.
Korean AI Dividend Proposal Triggers Semiconductor Stock Selloff
A South Korean policy chief’s proposal to return part of AI-related gains to citizens jolted the country’s chip market, with Samsung and SK Hynix closing down around 5% after Kim Yong-beom argued that profits from the AI infrastructure era should be shared more broadly. Bloomberg reported that the presidential office later described Kim’s post as personal opinion, while the same program pointed to related pressure points in the AI boom: CME’s plan with Silicon Data for compute futures and Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang’s absence from Trump’s China delegation as approval for Blackwell sales looked unlikely.
Small Seed Checks Still Drive Venture-Scale Returns
A-Star co-founder and general partner Bennett Siegel argues that venture-style outperformance still depends on small, early checks rather than joining the largest AI financings. In a Bloomberg Tech interview, Siegel said A-Star’s new $450 million fund is designed to preserve its seed-stage discipline: backing a limited number of companies before products, markets and consensus are fully formed, then following on selectively as winners emerge. He frames billion-dollar formation rounds as a separate market, not proof that traditional seed investing has lost its relevance.