From VC Haun on Investing in the Frontiers of AI Agents · · Bloomberg Live
“I think a lot of founders mistakenly focus on the here and now. And, you know, the here and now changes just like the technology changes. So to do who's who's looking at these technologies. And also my other advice to founders is they focus on one branch of government. And invariably and in this country we have three branches of government. And I think we're lucky we do. We've got article three, the courts. It's really important branch. No one's focused on it. And I always tell founders, you know, if stuff ends up in court. You're going to wish you were, you know who's who's in. Yeah. What do courts have to look at right now as precedent for AI? Nothing because it doesn't exist. So what are they going to look at? They're going to look at scholarly articles, law review articles, law review journals. Most founders have never heard of that. It's really important.”
On , Katie Haun, Former federal prosecutor at Haun Ventures, spoke about regulatory strategy during VC Haun on Investing in the Frontiers of AI Agents on Bloomberg Live.
Katie Haun, founder and CEO of Haun Ventures, announced in May 2026 that the firm raised $1 billion across a pair of new funds. Haun stated the capital is intended to back founders building what she described as "the new economy," which she said involves an intersection between AI and digital assets. She identified three structural shifts the firm is following: new financial infrastructure, new assets such as stablecoins and tokenized securities, and what she called "agentic finance." Haun also noted that the firm had already returned capital to some limited partners from its first pair of funds. In interviews, Haun discussed the regulatory environment for digital assets, noting the passage of the Genius Act and the upcoming crypto market structure bill. She said lawmakers still need convincing and emphasized the importance of working with both political parties. Regarding the Trump family's crypto ventures, Haun said she supports "things that are conflicts of interest as a general matter" and cited her support for bipartisan legislation to ban insider trading in Congress, adding that she considers the optics and atmospherics of such ventures important. Haun also expressed concern about the erosion of financial privacy under the Bank Secrecy Act, a topic she said she discussed when she was a prosecutor. She advised founders to consider all three branches of government and to look beyond Washington, D.C., noting that state governments and international regulators also play a role.