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Destiny Tech100
Destiny Tech100 is Sohail Prasad's publicly traded closed-end fund providing retail investors daily access to private companies like SpaceX and OpenAI.
Destiny Tech100
Sohail Prasad launched Destiny Tech100 in 2022, taking it public on the New York Stock Exchange in March 2024 after years of building a platform that originally helped startup employees sell secondary shares. The firm operates as a registered closed-end fund, targeting high-growth private technology companies that typically remain inaccessible to non-accredited investors. Prasad and his team source shares through secondary transactions, direct purchases, and structured vehicles. The fund's portfolio spans sectors including space exploration, artificial intelligence, fintech, and enterprise software. Publicly reported holdings include SpaceX, OpenAI, Stripe, Epic Games, and Plaid — names that dominate private-market ambitions but have explicitly chosen to stay private. Destiny Tech100 does not operate like a traditional venture firm; it does not lead rounds or take board seats. It acts as an aggregator, purchasing stakes on the secondary market and packaging them into a single ticker. The vehicle carries a layered management fee and expense structure typical of interval and tender-offer funds, and its daily trading volume often dwarfs that of more conventional closed-end peers. As of mid-2024, the fund's market price has swung from a massive premium over $100 per share to below $50, disconnecting sharply from its quarterly reported net asset value. This volatility highlights the structural tension at the core of the product: it applies public-market liquidity mechanisms to deeply illiquid assets. In November 2024, the firm filed to launch a second iteration, Destiny Tech100 2.0, signaling an intent to productize the wrapper beyond a single portfolio vintage (per the SEC filing, November 2024). The firm maintains a lean public presence, with Prasad as the identifiable investment lead, and lists no additional portfolio managers or major institutional co-investors in its regulatory documents. What distinguishes Destiny Tech100 is not its stock-picking but its regulatory architecture. It is a retail-first product built on a closed-end fund chassis, bypassing the accredited-investor gates that define most private-market access vehicles. That chassis is permanent-capital by nature, meaning the manager faces no redemption runs, but the portfolio companies themselves offer no tailored transparency or liquidity to DXYZ shareholders. The result is a publicly traded proxy for private tech exuberance — a bet on the direction of venture capital marks and retail animal spirits more than on any single company's exit timeline.
General information
Firm type
Asset Manager
Year founded
2022
AUM
Undisclosed
Location
Region
North America
Country
United States
City
New York
Corporate office
New York, NY, United States
Principals
Sohail Prasad
CEO and Portfolio Manager
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
How does Destiny Tech100 gain exposure to private companies?
The fund purchases shares on the secondary market and through special purpose vehicles, not by leading primary rounds. It aggregates positions in companies that are already venture-backed, often buying from early employees, former founders, or selling shareholders. This means the fund does not set valuation marks — it accepts the price at which sellers are willing to transact within the constraints of each company's transfer restrictions.
What explains the wild premium and discount swings in DXYZ?
The fund invests in illiquid private securities but trades intraday on the NYSE. Retail demand can push the market price far above the reported NAV per share, which is only updated quarterly and lags private-market realities. Conversely, sentiment shifts can cause the price to collapse below NAV. This is a structural feature of closed-end funds holding unlisted assets, amplified by social-media-driven flows and limited arbitrage mechanisms.
Does the fund charge management and performance fees?
Destiny Tech100 charges a management fee on net assets and bears additional expenses from the underlying fund structures it invests through. Because it is a closed-end fund and not a traditional 40 Act mutual fund, the fee layers can compound. The exact breakdown is disclosed in the fund's annual and semi-annual reports, but investors should model total expenses as materially higher than a passive index product.
Who is Sohail Prasad and what is his background?
Sohail Prasad founded Forge Global, a secondary marketplace for pre-IPO shares, before launching Destiny Tech100. His career has centered on building liquidity solutions for private-company shareholders. Prasad is the named portfolio manager of the fund and the public face of the firm, which operates without a large disclosed investment committee.
Is Destiny Tech100 structured as a single-family office or a venture firm?
It is neither. The firm operates as a registered closed-end management investment company, a structure more commonly used for municipal bond funds than venture portfolios. It is a pooled investment vehicle accessible to any brokerage account holder, not a family office or a traditional limited-partner fund. It does not call capital or have a drawdown structure.
How does the fund handle the concentration risk of a 23-stock portfolio?
The fund is deliberately concentrated in a small number of high-profile private tech names. It does not seek broad diversification and does not attempt to replicate a private-market index. Concentration magnifies the impact of any single holding's valuation change, which is a feature the firm markets as providing 'pure play' exposure to a curated basket of late-stage unicorns.
What is Destiny Tech100 2.0?
In November 2024, the firm filed an SEC registration for a second closed-end fund with the same core strategy — buying and holding a portfolio of leading private technology companies. The filing suggests the firm intends to launch successive vintages of this product, similar to how venture firms raise sequential funds, while keeping the original vehicle as a standalone portfolio (per the SEC filing, November 2024).
Profile maintained by Altss using OSINT (open-source intelligence), regulatory filings, licensed data partners, and verified direct submissions. Read the methodology. Last updated: . Continuous refresh with full update cycles at least every 30 days.
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