Before the end of its five-year lease, Andreessen Horowitz has reportedly given up on its Miami office after a mere two years in the space.

Also known as a16z, the Silicon Valley venture capital firm left its Miami Beach office this past May due to staff not “using it enough,” according to Andreessen Horowitz.

The VC firm’s move away from Miami may be a signal that the tech and crypto migration in recent years to Miami is short-lived. 

Yet, there are other factors beyond the empty office space that have contributed to the company’s Miami exit. For one, Andreessen Horowitz’s move to Magic City came shortly before the meltdown of Sam Bankman-Fried’s FTX, which heavily impacted the entire cryptocurrency sector. 

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Following FTX’s bankruptcy, the collapses of Silicon Valley Bank and Silvergate Bank, both of which worked considerably with tech and crypto companies, shook investor confidence. This led to many investors, not unreasonably, placing a premium on the solidity, reliability, and record of businesses and partners they decided to work with, as well as the effectiveness of the places they operated. 

All of these factors may have been considered for Andreessen Horowitz to rethink the logic and value of continuing its business in South Florida, particularly during a time when venture capital financing flowing to the city is slowing down. 

According to a report last Wednesday by Bloomberg, which cited people familiar with the matter, Andreessen Horowitz had signed a five-year lease back in 2022 for 8,300 square feet of office space in Miami Beach.

This move came after one of the company’s co-founders, Ben Horowizt, announced in July 2022 that the VC firm was switching to a “new operating model,” which involved a network of satellite offices, with one of its new locations in Miami Beach and others in New York City and Santa Monica. 

“The firm is now virtual, but can materialize physically on command,” Horowitz said at the time.

However, just a year later, Marc Andreessen, the company’s other co-founder, stated that remote work had “detonated” how the firm connected and that it was “not a good life” for younger workers, as the new model was robbing them of working relationships and future opportunities. 

Andreessen Horowitz wasn’t the only company heading to Magic City, with other prominent Silicon Valley figures expressing their interest in moving to Miami during the pandemic in 2020. One was VC Keith Rabois, who called San Francisco “so massively improperly run and managed that it’s impossible to stay here,” and then packed up for Miami. 

While some tech and crypto firms have been making an exodus from California in recent years, citing high taxes and the state’s liberal politics, a16z’s departure is the latest sign of shakiness in the migration from the Valley.

An area of interest for a16z has been crypto, but the company has been struggling to retain venture cash and entrepreneurial talent in recent years since its move to Miami. Bloomberg notes that venture investments have diminished to $400 million in Q2 2024 from $5.5 billion in all of 2022.

VC investment in Miami saw a huge decrease in 2023, dropping 70% to $2 billion, and more recently, dealmaking in the Miami-Fort Lauderdale area was $361 million in Q2 of this year, down from $632.2 million in Q1 of 2024. 

Some companies who had expanded to Miami or based their operations in the area have since moved elsewhere. Austin has emerged as another popular destination for firms leaving California, with Elon Musk stating in July that he’d relocate the headquarters of SpaceX and X, formerly Twitter, from California to Austin after previously moving Tesla’s HQ to the Texas city.