Foley Featured for Roundtable Insights on 2026 AI, IPO, and Investment Trends
Foley & Lardner LLP is highlighted in The Wall Street Journal and Venture Lens for the firm’s recent roundtable discussion on market trends.
Moderated by Foley partner Thomas Carlucci and featuring partners Natasha Allen, Louis Lehot, and Brian Wheeler, the discussion assessed developments from the past year, including AI, IPOs, and evolving strategic shifts in venture and private equity, and shared outlook on market conditions ahead in 2026.
In The Venture Lens article, “AI is Impacting Everything: Notes from Foley and Lardner’s 2026 Outlook Roundtable,” partner Louis Lehot described the current environment as “a generation’s worth” of early-stage company spending on rent and talent, noting ongoing uncertainty around future funding rounds.
“Whether all those companies are able to raise the next round is what I think is in sincere doubt,” Lehot added.
Partner Brian Wheeler and Lehot also touched on workforce reductions, noting the likelihood that many layoffs are reflecting broader strategic shifts rather than automation.
Turning to the private equity environment, Wheeler said that firms are preparing for a slower reopening of the exit window in early 2026, explaining that continuation funds have become a core tool for managers who have no realistic path to a public listing anytime soon. Lehot added that venture capital firms are facing similar themes, with many not calling capital at the pace they would like and a growing backlog of companies waiting to exit growing.
The article also included the roundtable’s discussion on AI regulation, in which partner Natasha Allen described the unsettled AI regulatory landscape. She referenced various state and federal efforts, including the administration’s proposed AI Action Plan.
The Wall Street Journal described an emerging trend in revenue decline across some businesses, especially certain older software companies. Lehot pointed to the AI transition as playing a role, as it has prompted a major resource reallocation, particularly from sales and marketing into product development.
“It’s choking off growth,” Lehot said. “All of these companies require at least 20%. If you don’t have that, you are a zombie and your valuation will tumble.”
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