Satya Patel’s Keen Eye for Unicorns
By James Moreau | 05 Jun, 2025

Bets on seed- and early-stage startups led to Homebrew’s stable of multi-billion-dollar companies.


As co-founder of the venture capital firm Homebrew, Satya Patel has shown a knack for spotting high-return startups.  Homebrew was born in 2013 with a “bottom up” investing philosophy — betting on companies from “boring” industries primarily in seed stage, then enhance their potential by leveraging technology.  This strategy has worked.  The company’s assets under management now exceed $210 billion.

Patel’s biggest win has been Chime which was once valued as high as $25 billion.  As one of Homebrew’s first bets in 2013, Chime was valued at only $7.26 million at the time.  The seed round was just the start.  Homebrew added to its stake in the Series A round, then again in the  B round in 2017.  

Chime offers checking and savings accounts with FDIC-insured banks geared towards low- and middle-income Americans, including mobile millennials.  It filed for an IPO in May 2025 and is expected to start trading on June 12, 2025.  The IPO valuation has declined to $11 billion as rising interest rates and an unpredictable economy have recently tempered expectations.

In Homebrew’s first year Patel found another unicorn in a privately owned startup called Plaid which had developed the first modern application programming interface (API ) for banking and credit card data.  Homebrew invested in its Series A round in September 2013 when the company’s valuation was estimated at $10 million.  Today Plaid is at over $6 billion.

Homebrew also made early-stage investments in 2016 in Shield AI, an aerospace and defense tech firm, and in 2021 in Headway, a Mental Health Startup worth $2.3 billion.

Patel also cofounded Screendoor, a fund that supports underrepresented General Partners and first-time venture capital managers.

Patel’s early career mixed tech and finance.  On the tech side he started a seven-year stint beginning in 2000 as a Sr. Manager for Google and DoubleClick, which was later acquired by Google.   From 2007-2011 Patel was a Partner at Battery Ventures, co-leading their seed and early-stage investing practices.  He worked at Twitter as VP of Product from 2011-2012.  

The Vegas native and son of Indian immigrants earned two undergraduate degrees from the University of Pennsylvania — one in finance and another in psychology.  The 50-year-old currently lives in Burlingame, California.