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Andrew Yeung and Antler Convene The Founder’s Endgame as Ankur Nagpal Redefines Post-Exit Leverage
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Andrew Yeung and Antler Convene The Founder’s Endgame as Ankur Nagpal Redefines Post-Exit Leverage

Tuesday, May 5, 2026
New York, NY

About This Event

Pressure is building in the founder class, and it is no longer tied to product velocity or fundraising cycles. The real tension shows up after the scoreboard lights up, when the exit is done and the identity it carried disappears overnight. Building used to be the hard part. Now the harder question is what remains when the company is no longer the center of gravity. That shift is starting to ripple across the startup ecosystem, and not everyone is prepared for what comes next.

That is exactly why May 5 in New York carries weight beyond another calendar entry. While NYC AI Agent Week floods the city with operators chasing scale and automation, “The Founder’s Endgame” compresses the conversation into something sharper. This is not about how to build faster. It is about what the build was always meant to produce. In a market saturated with surface-level startup news, this room goes deeper, into ownership, identity, and leverage.

Inside Antler’s New York space, 371 attendees step out of the conference current and into a more intentional environment. Founders from pre-seed to post-exit, investors recalibrating capital strategy, operators looking for their next move. The kind of room where conversations carry more weight than credentials. Andrew Yeung, often called the Gatsby of Silicon Alley, does what Andrew Yeung has built a reputation on doing. He engineers proximity. Not just access, but the kind that creates second-order outcomes across the startup ecosystem.

At the center is Ankur Nagpal, and timing is doing real work. Two exits totaling over $300M, with Carry closing roughly 3 weeks ago and USVC launching days later alongside Naval Ravikant. Teachable proved scale. Carry refined efficiency. USVC opens the gate, bringing venture access down to $500 while legacy models still protect the perimeter. Ankur Nagpal is not reflecting. He is actively reallocating power, and that makes this conversation current in a way most tech news cycles cannot replicate.

Andrew Yeung is not a distant moderator. Andrew Yeung invested in Carry, which shifts the dynamic from interview to informed pressure test. Around them, Antler grounds the room institutionally, with Kaila J. Lim shaping founder experience, while ABS Partners’ Ben Waller, Daria Ghasemi, and Zoe Snow connect the abstract ambition of startups to the physical reality of where companies scale. It is a layered room, built with intention, not volume.

The deeper signal sits underneath all of it. Most founders are trained to build enterprise value. Very few are trained to convert that value into enduring ownership. Ankur Nagpal has been explicit about that gap. Wealth flywheels, tax positioning, access to venture as an asset class. These are not side conversations. They are the mechanics that determine who compounds and who resets. This is where the startup ecosystem starts to separate builders from long-term capital allocators.

What happens in rooms like this does not stay confined to them. A first-time founder reframes how they approach equity. A post-exit operator sees a second act with structure instead of drift. An investor watches a model like USVC test whether venture can evolve from exclusivity into infrastructure. These are not abstract insights. They are directional shifts that echo through future startup news cycles, often long after the moment itself has passed.

New York will be loud that week. Panels, product drops, capital announcements. But the rooms that matter tend to operate at a different frequency. This one is not asking what you are building next. It is asking what that build ultimately gives you control over, and once that question lands, it has a way of reshaping decisions long after the room clears.