Normal view

Received yesterday — 2 August 2025

Figma IPO’s surprise winner is a charity with 13 million shares—and a famous backstory that sparked a bitter feud over an oil fortune decades ago

2 August 2025 at 16:04

As Figma went public this week to much fanfare—and an almost instantaneous 250% stock pop—quite a few folks from Silicon Valley made money.

But the biggest winner in terms of immediate IPO proceeds is not any of the marquee Silicon Valley venture capital firms such as Index Ventures, Greylock, and Kleiner Perkins, who sold only small slivers of their stakes in the offering. Nor is it any of the Figma management team, including CEO Dylan Field, who have most of their equity locked in the company.

Instead, a Novato, Calif.-based charity took home the biggest payout. The Marin Community Foundation, located an hour north of San Francisco and focused on grantmaking around issues like education, health, economic opportunity, and environmental concerns, sold more than 13.4 million shares in the offering, making it the largest selling shareholder (Figma itself only sold 12.5 million shares). 

As Figma initially priced its shares at $33 a pop, the Marin Community Foundation sold off its stake to the tune of more than $440 million. (If it had waited, of course, that stake would now be worth well over $1 billion.) 

The charity received its shares in Figma over the summer from Evan Wallace, the company’s elusive cofounder, a source familiar with the matter told Fortune. This isn’t necessarily a common practice right before a company goes public, another source told Fortune, but is one that does crop up from time to time—a founder with a connection to a charity giving shares with upside. There are adjacent examples from the past, including Mark Zuckerberg in 2013 donating $1 billion in Facebook shares to the Silicon Valley Community Foundation (though Zuck’s gift happened after Facebook’s 2012 IPO.)

A spokesperson for MCF described the foundation as “one of the largest community foundations in the U.S.,” adding “that a community foundation is a public charity that manages the philanthropy of individuals, families and institutions.” The spokesperson declined to comment on anything specific about the Figma gift, citing its privacy policy regarding individual donors or nonprofits.

Why Wallace made the gift to the foundation, and whether he has any personal connection to it, is not clear. Figma declined to provide a comment on behalf of Wallace, and Fortune was unable to reach him directly. Wallace and Figma CEO Dylan Field cofounded the company in 2012 after meeting as students at Brown University. Wallace stepped away from Figma in 2021 and has tended to stay out of the public eye.

The part of the charity that Wallace gave the shares to—the MCF Gift Fund—suggests that the Figma cofounder’s grant may involve a so-called donor advised fund, a tax efficient structure whereby a wealthy individual puts money into a non-profit and is then able to direct the funds to various causes. The Marin Community Foundation’s spokesperson said that the MCF Gift Fund “facilitates the acceptance of complex gifts that can be turned into philanthropic capital to enable donors to fulfill their philanthropic ambitions.”

But the Figma founder’s philanthropical move has a historical wrinkle that makes it even more interesting…

Before AI money there was oil money

Interestingly, the Marin County Foundation, which had about $2.8 billion in total assets at the end of 2024, is itself the product of a previous generation of big business—and of a bitter, years-long legal fight for control of the money.

The foundation’s history traces back to Beryl and Leonard Buck, whose wealth was linked to an investment in Belridge Oil. When Beryl Buck died in 1975 she gave the money to the San Francisco Foundation, with the wish that it be used for causes in Marin County, where she had lived in the tony town of Ross. But when oil giant Shell purchased the rights to Belridge Oil four years later for more than $3.6 billion, the value of the $7.6 million Buck Trust was suddenly worth $240 million ($1 billion in today’s dollars), and the SF Foundation became the 11th largest foundation in the U.S., according to a history on its website

The problem, as the SF Foundation explains it, was that “we found ourselves in the uncomfortable position of granting tens of millions of dollars each year (far more than we granted to all other counties combined) to the wealthiest county in the Bay Area.”

Or as a story in the LA Times noted back then, one of the country’s most well-resourced charities was stuck looking for ways to spend all the money in the ‘hot-tub capital of America.’

Marin County, California is among the wealthiest in the U.S.
Doug Pensinger/Getty Images

When the Foundation went to court to seek permission to spend some of the money in other, needier parts of the Bay Area, a public firestorm ensued. The move was “characterized as a threat to the sanctity of wills and the health of philanthropy, and as an offense against capitalism, the American way of life, and God,” Yale Law School professor John G. Simon wrote of the affair. “Foundation personnel were said to be corrupt and dishonest and, in the language of a Marin County supervisor, ‘grave-robbing bastards.’”

In the end, the San Francisco Foundation lost its court battle, and a new organization—The Marin Community Foundation—was created in 1986 to administer the Buck Trust. 

Now, 39 years later, the Marin County Foundation is getting another massive windfall. Whether Wallace is aware of the contentious and famous story behind the foundation he picked is a mystery. But, wittingly or not, the reclusive Figma cofounder has managed to put the foundation back in the headlines at the cusp of another historical moment in business history and wealth creation.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

© Michael Nagle/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Received before yesterday

Why Index’s Danny Rimer bet on Figma and Dylan Field at the seed stage

1 August 2025 at 11:01

The first time Danny Rimer laid eyes on Dylan Field, Field was just 18 years old.

Then, Field was an intern at the buzzy startup Flipboard. Field gave a presentation to the startup’s board, self-assuredly outlining his research about the features users loved and which ones flopped. Rimer, a partner at Index Ventures since 2002, remembers it very clearly. 

“What was interesting was not only did he do a very good quantitative job of figuring out what features made the most sense, but the way he presented it was incredibly visually appealing and original,” Rimer told Fortune. “I remember him as an 18-year-old and thinking: ‘Wow, this person has a unique, compelling way of conveying information.’”

Rimer met Field again shortly thereafter, as Field was looking to raise a seed round for Figma. It was 2013, and the biggest tech IPO that year was Twitter, and there wasn’t necessarily optimism about design as a market. Field also wasn’t in a rush to put out a product. 

“Here was this 19-year-old, who had a lot of clarity about what he wanted to do—democratize the world of design, and provide tools to everyone,” said Rimer, a college art history major who was drawn to Figma’s taste and ambition. “He had this ambition of dropping out of university to go after this crazy idea, where it’s clear that he’s not going to be able to come up with a product for over two years. In the world of move-fast-break-things, here were two folks [Field and Figma cofounder Evan Wallace] who were saying, ‘We’re not going to have anything for two years, so we hope you’re comfortable with that.’”

Rimer—whose investments also include Etsy, Dropbox, Discord, and Dream Games—bit, leading Figma’s 2013 seed round. At the seed, Index invested $1.8 million, and over the next 12 years invested a total of $86.5 million in the company, a source familiar with the matter told Fortune. Index sold roughly 5% of its shares, a sliver of its total stake, in the IPO to create a float, collecting about $66 million. As Figma shares soared on their first day of trading Thursday, Index’s remaining stake in Figma swelled to north of $7 billion. The source told Fortune that the seed multiple by market close on IPO day was 1300% multiple on invested capital—ultimately, an almost 90x return. 

Rimer declined to comment on specific numbers. Nevertheless, Figma’s absolute shredding of the public markets goes to show not only that tech IPOs are back, but that the company’s original thesis—that design matters and is expansive—was right all along. 

“It was a time when we thought everyone in the world wanted to be a designer,” Rimer said. “Design was sort of what architecture was in the early 20th century, during the Bauhaus movement. Everyone was talking about being a designer of apps, of software, of fashion. It was a term that became synonymous with the future. So, we thought design meant a lot more than just designing software or graphic design, that it would be an all-encompassing term. And that probably meant most people would want to try out their chops at designing.”

It’s why Rimer and the Index team—also backers in two of the venture capital success stories of this year, Wiz’s $32 billion mega-sale to Google and ServiceTitan’s IPO—don’t subscribe to the much-quoted total addressable market (or TAM) metric. Chasing an exact TAM can be misleading, Rimer said. 

“We learned a long time ago to think of the total available market as noise, and we’re probably going to get it wrong,” he said. “An example: We invested in Etsy, while most folks were thinking: How big can Etsy be? How many Sunday crafts people are there going to be in the world? 100,000? 200,000? And we said, this is actually a phenomenon. Everyone wants to make their passion their vocation. We could have millions of these folks. Conversely, we passed on Airbnb because we were thinking, how many hotel rooms they can cannibalize, instead of thinking Airbnb is actually going to expand the market dramatically again.”

Figma amid the AI boom, Rimer said, is a full-circle moment of sorts, as AI creates more vibe designers in the way it has created vibe coders. 

“We did not predict that AI was going to create another exponential curve of opportunity for Figma,” Rimer said. “We already thought that the number and the speed of apps and software being created pre-AI was already really compelling. But, of course, AI has lowered the bar for anyone to create an app, and anyone to be a developer. So, the core necessity of design has only become more central for a much larger pool of people.”

The intern with the thoughtful slides had it right all along: Design wasn’t peripheral. It was fundamental. 

ICYMI… The Term Sheet Podcast has officially launched! I can’t wait to talk to you all every week. Our first guest: Will Hurd, chief strategy officer at CHAOS Industries. Episode 1 is live here.

See you Monday,

Allie Garfinkle
X:
@agarfinks
Email: [email protected]
Submit a deal for the Term Sheet newsletter here.

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

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

© Index

Index's Danny Rimer and Figma's Dylan Field at the New York Stock Exchange on July 31, 2025.

Figma shares more than triple in soaring public debut

31 July 2025 at 18:44

Figma, the design software company led by CEO and cofounder Dylan Field, saw its stock price more than triple in a stunning debut on the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday.

Shares of Figma were trading as high as $107 within minutes after it began trading under the ticker FIG. The company and its early shareholders raised $1.2 billion in its IPO on Wednesday, with shares priced at $33. The stock began trading Thursday at $85 a share, and took off like a rocket from there.

The surge gave Figma a market cap of roughly $46 billion, eclipsing the $20 billion price that Adobe had planned to acquire the company for before the merger was abandoned in 2023 due to regulatory pushback. Adobe, with a market cap of around $152 billion, will now be Figma’s key public markets competitor as the upstart chases market share. Praveer Melwani, Figma’s CFO, told Fortune on Thursday morning that it will be business as usual for Figma moving forward, with possible acquisitions in the pipeline.

“Candidly, the way we’re running this—or the way the offering shaped up—it’s a majority secondary transaction with a small portion of primary that facilitates to pay the tax that’s owed on the RSU [restricted stock unit] settlement,” said Melwani, who became Figma’s first business operations head in 2017. “So, we’re net neutral from a cash impact on technology. The story stays the same. We have been acquisitive in the past—primarily small teams and talent.”

Figma’s securities filing for its public debut showed a growing, profitable business, with revenue up in Q1 2025, 46% year-over-year to $228.2 million and a net income for the quarter at $44.8 million.

Figma’s opening pop reflects not only optimism about Figma, but optimism about the venture-backed IPO landscape overall. Muted in recent years, tech IPOs have been in the midst of a slow but decisive recovery. Recently, VC-backed darlings like Circle, Chime, Hinge Health, and CoreWeave have all gone public, with varying degrees of success.

Figma itself is backed by a number of Silicon Valley stalwarts, including Index Ventures, Kleiner Perkins, Greylock, and Sequoia Capital, all of whom hold stakes worth north of $1 billion in the company. For Figma moving forward, the biggest question is how the company will adapt to and capitalize on AI. Greylock venture partner John Lilly told Fortune that Figma and Field are well-positioned.

“The way we’re going to be interacting with more systems and technology over time means interfaces have to be designed right,” said Lilly. “Figma is the way organizations design together, it’s sort of the operating system… As long as we keep investing and keep making sure that we’re on top of AI—integrating the best tools and creating some of them—then AI looks like a huge opportunity to me.”

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

© David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Dylan Field, co-founder and chief executive officer of Figma

As Figma goes public, a turning point in the long-awaited IPO market recovery takes shape

31 July 2025 at 11:44

IPOs are prismatic. 

They’re about the past and the future, about the company that’s going public and the wider market. IPOs are moments of truth—will public market investors, literally, buy what VCs have been backing for years? It’s also an event that tests how people are thinking about the wider IPO market. Are we, after all this time, so back?

On Wednesday, Figma, the design software unicorn led by Dylan Field, completed its initial public offering, raising $1.2 billion in proceeds ($1.4 billion if you include the over-allotement) for the company and some of its early shareholders, signaling strong demand for its shares which will begin trading on the New York Stock Exchange this morning. Figma seemingly sailed through its investor roadshow, upping its share price from the initial $25 to $28 range to the $33 it ultimately priced at. And after the company’s $20 billion planned merger with Adobe fell apart a year-and-a-half ago, the $19 billion valuation that Figma has fetched in its IPO is a pretty remarkable testament to its potential as a standalone business.

Derek Hernandez, emerging technology senior analyst at PitchBook, says that even compared to successful IPOs of late, Figma is singular, with its year-over-year revenue growth approaching 50%, and its Q1 profitability (Figma’s Q1 net income was $44.9 million). 

“Figma stands out even among recent high-growth software IPOs like Circle and CoreWeave,” Hernandez said via email. “Figma has both scale and earnings and is a prime example of a high-growth, VC-backed company with a strong narrative that the market is eager for, positioning it as one of the most credible high-growth listings this year.”

This is, ultimately, high praise—in June, stablecoin firm Circle was priced at $31 a share, and closed yesterday at about $190, while CoreWeave’s initially muted IPO still has the company up about 150% year-to-date. High praise, of course, also means high expectations. This, perhaps, has long been true of Figma: A look at the company’s SEC filings shows that a staggering four top VC firms have stakes in Figma valued north of $1 billion—Index, Greylock, Kleiner Perkins, and Sequoia. 

And while the fallout from the failed Adobe merger was public, that attempted merger also lingers in the background as a positive signal of sorts, “which served as a massive validation of Figma’s strategic importance and market position,” said Greg Martin, managing director at Rainmaker Securities, via email. Adobe looms in Figma’s past and its future, added Martin, who noted that Figma has both the opportunity and challenge of “overtaking Adobe as the leading design software company, with its cloud-native collaborative platform.”

One interesting detail: Figma itself only raised $411 million. Most of the proceeds are going to a group of selling shareholders (including VCs) each taking a small slice off the table. But the biggest selling shareholder is MCF Gift Fund, part of the Marin Community Foundation, a philanthropic organization which sold 13.4 million shares for a cool $441 million.

For today, though, it appears that Figma could be the harbinger of a simmering truth: that the market for venture-backed IPOs is in a thoughtful recovery. PitchBook’s Hernandez points out via email that there have been 119 offerings year-to-date, up 45% year-over-year. 

“Figma could serve as a bellwether for the market today,” Hernandez wrote Fortune. “It may provide proof-of-concept for other SaaS names, such as Canva, Netskope, and Databricks… Should Figma stumble out of the gate, especially with all its strengths, this may reinforce some caution among late-stage VCs and delay other large tech floats.”

This isn’t a 2021 deluge, but it’s not an early-2024 drought either. 

“While investor appetite has been selective, Figma shows that there’s still strong demand for companies with compelling growth stories, strong fundamentals, and clear differentiation—especially in categories like SaaS and AI,” said Rainmaker Securities’ Martin via email. “We’re not back to the frothy environment of 2021, but high-quality companies are beginning to test the waters successfully again.”

If IPOs are prisms, Figma’s a flashpoint. Now, we see what shines through. 

Fortune Term Sheet podcast hosted by Allie Garfinkle graphic with photo of Allie, links to YouTube video

Introducing the Term Sheet PodcastAfter years in your inbox, Term Sheet’s coming to a podcast feed near you. Today, we’re launching the Term Sheet Podcast—bringing this long-loved newsletter to life in audio and video. Each week, I’ll sit down with investors and founders to break down the biggest deals, trade takes, and drop at least one dad joke. First up: Will Hurd, Chief Strategy Officer at CHAOS Industries. He’s been a presidential candidate, congressman, and undercover CIA officer. You won’t want to miss it, so listen here. And, as always, hot takes, reviews, and general feelings go to [email protected]

See you tomorrow,

Allie Garfinkle
X:
@agarfinks
Email: [email protected]
Submit a deal for the Term Sheet newsletter here.

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

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

© Figma

Dylan Field, CEO and cofounder of Figma.
❌