CLAUDE Venture Selection Synthesis Memo
Decision-Grade Analysis Across Four Supply-Chain Theses | February 24, 2026 | CONFIDENTIAL
Top 5 Surprises
- Semiconductor export enforcement has reached existential severity. Applied Materials $252M, Cadence $140M+. Career-ending, company-threatening fines.
- Battery warranty risk transfer is commercially real. Munich Re 15-year warranty reinsurance for Hithium. TWAICE-enabled performance warranty insurance exists today.
- EU Battery Passport is both accelerant and constraint. Mandatory Feb 2027, but Regulation 2023/1542 restricts data reuse — fatally weakens “data-asset-first” models.
- Semiconductor benchmarking has tried and failed. DRAM futures (late 1980s/90s) and Enron’s 2001 forward contracts failed on fungibility and technology churn.
- Multi-enterprise coordination incumbents are massive. Blue Yonder/One Network ~$839M; e2open >$500M subscription revenue.
Most Attractive Short-Term Thesis
Winner: Thesis 4 — Compliance Wedge (Semiconductors)
- Short-term composite score: 3.95/5.00
- Enforcement-driven pain highest of any thesis
- Buyer unambiguous (VP Export Compliance / CFO at chipmakers)
- Time-to-value <90 days (ECCN classifier + license workflow)
- Revenue realism strong ($200–500K ACV × 5–10 logos = $3–5M Year 1)
Scoring Framework (10 Dimensions)
All four theses scored across: Problem Severity, Buyer Clarity, Time-to-Value, Commercial Velocity, Software-First Feasibility, Macro Tailwinds, Strategic Expansion, Data Moat Potential, Founder-Market Fit, Incumbent Displacement Difficulty.
Source: Local file — Project-TBD/Research/AI Synthesis/CLAUDE Venture_Selection_Synthesis_Memo.pdf