Venture fundraising into health care hit $15.8 billion halfway through 2022, which already translates to the third-highest year in history, SVB’s new mid-year report on health care investments and exits shows.
Why it matters: In a market fraught with public market volatility and a slowdown in dealmaking, investors are having no problem raising new vehicles with dedicated allocations to health care.
- That validates the industry’s longer-term tailwinds and resilience as market (and macro) headwinds continue dominating headlines.
Zoom in: Venture investment in health tech, specifically, can be characterized by a record level of seed and Series A fundings during 1H 2022, which includes a higher frequency of $50 million-plus Series A rounds, SVB says.
- Fueled by clinical trial enablement deals, the median seed and Series A funding valuation increased to $13 million, versus $10 million the two prior years, per the report.
Reality check: Overall, Q2 investment fell 40%, from Q1, the report shows. Plus…
- There were no VC-backed health tech public debuts in the first half of the year following the 2021 IPO party.
- While early-stage fundings thrived, late stage activity dropped off with the IPO window shut down.
Between the lines: If you look at the market from a historical perspective, things still look pretty good.
- Across health care, Q2 investment totaled $15.5 billion, which is lower than every quarter in 2021 but more than every 2020 period, per SVB.
- In health tech, volume and capital invested declined notably relative to 2021, but at $10.2 billion of investments already well on pace to surpass 2020.
Yes, and: Health tech, compared with other sub-sectors, witnessed the strongest step-up multiples, both in early- and later-stage fundings, SVB says.
- Early stage standouts were Patient12 (17.9x) and Homeward Health (10x), Atlas Health (13.7x) and AcuityMD (12.3x).
- Late stage standouts were CareBridge Health (10x) and Health Gorilla (5.5x).
The most active: Accounting for venture activity overall, Gaingels has been the most active health tech investor since 2021, clinching 33 total investments, SVB says.
- General Catalyst, Alumni Ventures Group, Andreessen Horowitz, and Insight Partners followed suit.
What’s next in health tech: SVB predicts…
- Q3 investment in health tech will drop to 2020 levels but bounce back in Q4 to ~$7 billion.
- Activity will be characterized by lower valuations and fewer mega-deals as public market chaos weighs on private markets.
- Top companies will see more insider and bridge rounds, but more down rounds are likely.
- Non-traditional investors will participate in fewer new venture-backed deals compared with 2021.
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