Don’t just focus on the labels “Sam Altman’s ex-boyfriend” or “robbery victim”! Graduating high school and venturing into Silicon Valley, Lachy Groom’s life is truly a hardcore success story.
Written by: KarenZ, Foresight News
When a $4.4 million mansion in San Francisco was robbed by an armed thief disguised as a courier, and $11 million worth of cryptocurrency was stolen, the focus of this bizarre case was not only the skillful robber, but also the homeowner, Lachy Groom, who unexpectedly became a hot topic of public discussion.
According to the New York Post, citing police sources and people familiar with Sam Altman’s past relationships, an armed robber disguised as a deliveryman rang the doorbell of the residence. The direct victim at home during the robbery was Joshua—Lachy Groom’s roommate and business partner. The robber tricked him into opening the door under the pretense of signing for a package and borrowing a pen, then pulled out a gun to take control.
The following 90 minutes were a nightmare: Joshua was bound with tape, beaten, and on the phone, an accomplice recited his personal information for extortion. In the end, the robber forced Joshua to operate and empty his cryptocurrency wallet, ultimately stealing about $11 million worth of Ethereum and Bitcoin, as well as his phone and laptop.
This case instantly exploded in public opinion due to the identity of the homeowner—Sam Altman’s ex-boyfriend. The New York Post reported that property records show Lachy Groom bought the house on Dorland Street from Sam Altman’s brother for $1.8 million in 2021, and he was once a close partner of the ChatGPT creator.
Although news headlines define Lachy Groom with the gossip-laden label “ChatGPT boss Sam Altman’s ex-boyfriend,” if you think Lachy Groom is just “the man who once stood behind Altman,” you’re sorely mistaken.

A photo of Sam Altman and Lachy Groom posted on Facebook in 2014.

The two attended the Allen & Company Sun Valley Conference in Idaho in 2018, source: Getty Images
Putting aside the gossip and the unfortunate robbery, if you look at Lachy Groom’s resume, you’ll find: even without Sam Altman’s “halo,” his life story is enough to make 99% of entrepreneurs “read on their knees.”
Prodigy, former Stripe executive, top investor, Stripe’s 30th employee, and co-founder of AI robotics company Physical Intelligence—these are all labels for this 31-year-old Australian. He also made heavy bets on Figma, Notion, and Ramp when they were still unknown.
Today, using this “robbery” as a starting point, let’s dig into the story of this “talent hunter” from Perth, Australia.
Born in Perth, Australia, Lachy Groom clearly followed the “model child” script.
According to reports by The West Australian and SmartCompany in 2012, Lachy Groom was a bona fide “teen geek.”
In an interview with The West Australian, Lachy Groom’s father, Geoff Groom, recalled that Lachy was entrepreneurial from a young age, earning money by walking dogs for others, setting up a lemonade stand with friends, and always finding ways to make pocket money and spot business opportunities.
After graduating from high school, Lachy Groom was very clear-headed—he didn’t think traditional university education could teach him what he wanted. So, this teenager made a life-changing decision: go to the United States, go to San Francisco, and get as close as possible to the heart of the internet.
Why? Because at 17, Lachy saw through a reality: Australia’s startup ecosystem couldn’t compare to San Francisco and Silicon Valley. More importantly, he discovered a harsh business truth: “Valuations in the US are much higher.”
After arriving in the US, Lachy Groom didn’t rush to become a VC, but instead joined a then-growing company—Stripe. As it turned out, this was not just a job, but a ticket to the center of power in Silicon Valley.
According to Lachy Groom’s LinkedIn profile, he was Stripe’s 30th employee, initially working on growth, then managing global business expansion and operations teams, participating in Stripe’s expansion in Singapore, Hong Kong, and New Zealand, and later leading Stripe’s card issuing business.
During his seven years at Stripe (2012-2018), Lachy Groom witnessed the company’s transformation into a “Silicon Valley giant.” This was not just work experience, but a hands-on MBA course on “how to build scalable products in the internet age.”
This experience gave him three invaluable assets:
1. Financial freedom.
2. Accumulated rich operational experience at Stripe, gaining a deep understanding of how B2B SaaS can grow from zero to a hundred-billion scale.
3. Thanks to his outstanding performance at Stripe, Lachy Groom later became an important member of the “Stripe Mafia.” Members of this circle went on to occupy half of Silicon Valley’s venture capital scene.
In 2018, Lachy Groom made a bold decision to “go solo” and leave Stripe.
He didn’t join a big-name fund but instead started as a Solo Capitalist, turning to full-time angel investing, and his investment style was completely different from most angel investors.
Hustle Fund once analyzed his “approach”: Most angel investors “cast a wide net” (invest in 100 companies, $5,000 each, and pray a few succeed), while Groom is a “sniper”—when he’s confident, he writes big checks of $100,000 to $500,000 and makes decisions quickly.
Lachy Groom’s investment strategy can be summed up in one sentence: invest in tools that users or developers will love spontaneously, not software they are forced to use. Core investment principles include a bottom-up adoption model, solving real workflow problems, and making cautious yet meaningful investments.
According to PitchBook statistics, Lachy Groom has made 204 investments, with a portfolio of 122 companies, currently managing investments through multiple funds, and is known for high hit rates, leading rounds, and heavy bets on B2B/SaaS. Check out some of his “legendary projects”:
We can see Lachy Groom’s investment logic: invest in products that reshape the way people work, and in young people who, like him, are eager to change the world.
After making enough money from software, Lachy Groom set his sights on a more hardcore field.
With the advent of the AI era, Lachy Groom began to ponder a bigger question: if the boundaries between AI and hardware blur, where will the next internet-scale innovation happen? The answer: bringing general AI into the physical world.
In March 2024, no longer content to invest from behind the scenes, he teamed up with several top scientists to found the robotics company Physical Intelligence (Pi).
The co-founding team of Physical Intelligence is truly impressive:
The company’s goal sounds like science fiction: to develop a universal foundational model as the “brain” for robots, so that robots are no longer just machines that screw bolts, but intelligent agents that can adapt to complex environments like humans. Lachy Groom has said that Physical Intelligence’s uniqueness lies in its aim to develop software that can be applied to various robot hardware.
The capital markets are also going crazy for this “dream team.” In the month it was founded, Physical Intelligence completed a $70 million seed round, led by Thrive Capital, with Khosla Ventures, Lux Capital, OpenAI and Sequoia Capital participating.
Just seven months later, in November 2024, Physical Intelligence completed another $400 million funding round, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, venture capital firms Thrive Capital and Lux Capital led the round, with other investors including OpenAI, Redpoint Ventures, and Bond.
Just a week ago (November 21), Physical Intelligence completed another $600 million funding round, bringing the company’s valuation to $5.6 billion. Alphabet’s independent growth fund CapitalG led this round, with existing investors Lux Capital, Thrive Capital, and Jeff Bezos continuing to participate.
From a boy in Perth, Australia, who wrote code in elementary school, to joining Stripe’s core team without attending college, and now holding huge checks in one hand and building AI robots in the other as a Silicon Valley heavyweight—Lachy Groom has proven with his strength that his life story is a thousand times more exciting than the “Altman’s ex-boyfriend” tabloid label.
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