ARK Venture Fund
Score
5
- ClassBeneficial Interest
- Managed byArk Investment Management LLC
- Release dateMarch 2, 2024
- UpdatedJuly 23, 2025
Net Asset Value
$155.8M(as of 5/31/2025)
Max. Offering Size
Not disclosedInvestment Style
GrowthHQ Location
St. Petersburg, FloridaAmount Raised
Not disclosedLegal Construction
Delaware Statutory TrustAsset Class
Venture CapitalInception
September 2022Eligibility
All investorsMin. Investment
$500Target Return
Not disclosedNet Total Return
17.17%Carried Interest
NoneAnnual Management Fee
2.75%Holding Period
Permanent CapitalAdvisor
ARK Investment Management LLCDistributor
Foreside Fund Services LLCAuditor
Ernst & Young LLPCounsel
Dechert LLP and Sullivan & Worcester LLPThe Bottom Line
ARK Venture Fund lets investors as young as 18 back a curated portfolio of late-stage private tech companies (think OpenAI, SpaceX, Epic Games, and Stripe) for as little as $500 with no accreditation hurdles. You’re getting professional venture exposure once reserved for big institutions—plus a dash of public AI/tech stocks—inside a single fund with permanent capital and quarterly liquidity gates.
The catch? You’re paying a 2.9% all-in expense ratio, values are set by ARK’s internal models (not the stock market), and there’s no guarantee you’ll be able to tap your money whenever you want. This is a bold, high-upside vehicle best suited for long-term, hands-off growth seekers—not a piggy bank for quick cash-outs.
Your Money vs. Reality
Notes: S&P 500 = SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY), NASDAQ 100 = Invesco QQQ Trust (QQQ), Russell 2000 = iShares Russell 2000 ETF (IWM), Gold = LBMA spot price, Treasuries = iShares 7-10 Year Treasury ETF (IEF), Money Market = VMFXX 7-day yield
Key Takeaways:
- ARKVX beat bonds, gold, and cash, but lagged the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 by $1,400–$1,900 over the period.
- Small-cap and gold performance were in the same ballpark, meaning you didn’t get “moonshot” returns—but you did get diversification.
- Venture illiquidity, high fee drag, and lack of daily pricing reduce the compounding power.
An investor who chose the S&P 500 instead would be $1,383 richer per $10,000 today. ARKVX still beats bonds and cash but equity indexes remain the long-run wealth engine.
Fund Strategy
An evergreen interval fund that keeps 70-90% in late-stage private companies and the rest in public disruptors. Quarterly redemptions (5% cap) provide a slow exit valve while letting ARK chase illiquid opportunities.
Fit Check
Ideal For:
- Long-range investors who want a VC flavor without a $1 M accreditation hurdle.
- Those happy to trade daily liquidity for private-market upside.
Less Ideal For:
- Anyone needing fast access to cash.
- Fee hawks who prefer low-cost index funds.
Fast Facts
Key Concern
What It Means for You
Single-Theme Concentration
All bets ride on “disruptive innovation;” a tech winter would sting.
Heavy Private-Value Marks
80%+ of NAV set by ARK’s models; down-markets could hit valuations hard.
2.90% Net Expense Ratio
High costs siphon roughly $290 a year per $10,000 invested.
Quarterly 5% Liquidity Cap
Redemption requests above 5% get prorated—cash may be delayed.
Pros/Bulls Say

- Access to late-stage private startups and "unicorn" companies previously out of reach for all but the ultra-wealthy.
- ARK's curated, research-driven approach to innovation themes benefits investors seeking the next generation of growth leaders.
- Blended model of illiquid private assets and tradable public disruptors gives HENRYs a rare shot at VC exposure with fewer hurdles.
Cons/Bears Say

- NAV is mostly ARK’s own estimate—the risk is you don’t know what your shares are worth until a real exit happens.
- 2.9% expense ratio is more than 10X higher than a typical S&P 500 index fund and chews into compounding.
- Quarterly redemption is capped at 5% of fund shares; stressed periods could delay your exit.
Verdict
5/5 – ARK Venture Fund offers regular investors a shot at “Silicon Valley” upside, but if you’re chasing maximum compounding, low fees, and liquidity, the old-fashioned index fund still wins. It’s best treated as a supporting player for HENRYs, not a core holding.
Fees & Expenses
Fee Type
Why It Matters
How Calculated
Typical Amount
Fee Impact Example:
If you invest $10,000 for 10 years at an 8% gross annual return, here’s what happens:
- You’ll pay about $290 each year in fees—that’s $2,900 over a decade, not including the lost growth on those dollars.
- Net result: You keep about 72% of your total gains, with the other 28% eaten by fees.
- Over long periods, steady high fees meaningfully reduce your ending wealth—turning high-flying “gross” performance into average “net” compounding.
Portfolio Snapshot
Market Cap
Geography
End Market
Overview
ALIGNMENT: Above Average
- ARK charges a flat 2.75% management fee (no carried interest) and CEO Cathie Wood has $1 M+ of her own money in the fund, signaling real conviction. That skin-in-the-game plus a fee waiver that caps total expenses at 2.90% through 2025 helps bridge manager-investor interests.
- Still, the base fee accrues daily regardless of performance, so ARK collects paychecks even during drawdowns. Investors should view the alignment as strong philosophically but only partial financially once the waiver expires.
Performance: Average
- Since launching in late 2022, ARKVX has compounded about 6% annually—respectable given a volatile tech backdrop but a step behind major equity indexes that topped 10%. Early gains sprang from private re-valuations of SpaceX, Epic Games, and OpenAI, balanced by markdowns in smaller holdings.
- The fund’s hybrid public-private mix should blunt some IPO-market freezes, yet NAVs can spike or slump when big positions reprice. Expect lumpy, venture-style return patterns rather than smooth ETF-like growth.
Market Risk: High
- Portfolio is 85%+ innovation-themed tech companies—great in AI booms, brutal in rate shocks. Because holdings are mostly private, daily volatility looks low on paper, but true economic risk mirrors high-beta public comps once they list.
- Public equities inside the fund provide liquidity but add correlation to growth indexes. If tech multiples compress or exits stall, NAV write-downs could compound quickly. Investors must stomach headline swings and multi-year lock-ups between liquidity windows.
Business Risk: High
- As an interval fund, ARKVX avoids forced selling during panics, letting managers ride out venture cycles while offering 5% quarterly redemptions. ARK’s brand, research bench, and co-investor network secure coveted deal flow.
- Yet the fund’s AUM (~$156 M) is modest, so each large private stake has outsized influence on results. Rising success fees for placement agents and the cost of due-diligence teams add overhead pressure if growth in assets stalls.
Debt Risk: Low
- ARKVX itself employs zero fund-level leverage; private companies inside may carry debt, but late-stage VC rounds are equity-heavy, limiting interest-rate exposure.
- That said, convertible notes and SAFE agreements could dilute returns if down-rounds spark repricing. Investors aren’t on the hook for fund-level margin calls, but they still face valuation hits if portfolio companies lever up ahead of tough capital markets.
Liquidity Risk: Above Average
- Redemptions occur only four times per year, capped at 5% of outstanding shares. If exit requests exceed the limit, payouts get prorated, forcing some investors to wait multiple quarters.
- NAV marks lag real-time sentiment, so a wave of bad tech news could trigger a redemption queue precisely when private stakes are hardest to offload. HENRYs should treat the money as locked for several years and keep emergency funds elsewhere.
Transparency: Below Average
- ARK publishes daily NAVs, top-holding lists, and quarterly commentary that breaks down private vs. public weights—rare openness for a venture vehicle. Third-party auditors review valuations, and fee math is spelled out clearly in FAQs.
- Still, private-company financials remain confidential, and fair-value marks arrive quarterly, not daily. Investors rely on ARK’s internal models between financing rounds, so public-market equivalents offer more immediate price discovery.
Manager Insights

Cathie Wood
CEO, CIO, PMExperience & Highlights: 30+ years in thematic investing; founder of ARK Invest; $1M+ personal investment in ARKVX.
Education: BS Finance, USC.
Peer Comparison
(3/31/2025)
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