Tech downturn slows funding in startups

The slowdown in venture capital funding has spread to early-stage startups, with that part of the market suffering one of the biggest investment drops in more than a decade.

In the second quarter, venture capitalists invested around $16bn in US early-stage deals — known as Series A and B rounds — a 22% decrease from the year-earlier period, according to PitchBook Data Inc. That marked the biggest quarterly year-over-year decline in early-stage funding since at least 2010, with the exception of a drop in the second quarter of 2020, when investors pulled back briefly amid the onset of the global pandemic.

The retreat shows investors’ increasing caution toward riskier investments such as nascent companies, a marked change in sentiment from recent years, when competition among venture firms drove them to invest ever earlier in a startup’s life cycle. It follows a similar pullback in funding for later-stage startups, which are closer to going public and thus more affected by stock-market changes.

The change is shifting more power back to investors. For years, a deluge of cheap money kept valuations soaring, and venture firms said they spent less time on research and vetting the companies to court founders and not miss out on deals. The pandemic accelerated many of these trends, as demand for software services increased to accommodate businesses moving online and interest rates stood at historic lows.

Earlier this year, venture capitalists remained optimistic about the early-stage funding environment even as the public shares of tech companies ranging from DoorDash to Snowflake cratered. US early-stage funding increased 50% in the first quarter compared with the year-earlier period, PitchBook data show.

That calculus has changed amid a worsening macroeconomic environment and a virtual freeze in investment for more mature, growth-stage startups. Venture firms that focus on early-stage investments typically rely on cash-rich money managers to mark up the value of their holdings in subsequent funding rounds. But many of these large investment firms earlier this year slowed their dealmaking or exited the startup market entirely amid the stock market rout, according to venture capitalists, raising the investment bar for younger companies.

Even funding for seed-stage deals, often the first source of outside financing for companies still developing their products, has taken a hit. US deal volume dropped 11% to $3.9bn in the second quarter compared with the year-earlier period, the first such quarterly drop on a year-over-year basis in almost two years, according to data from PitchBook.

“The seed and Series A funding environment is the toughest I’ve ever seen in my career managing a fund,” said Jeff Morris, who manages a crypto-focused early-stage fund called Chapter One. “It will be painful in the short-term.”

Amid the chilled environment, investors say even the youngest startups are now being expected to demonstrate they have a clear path to generating revenue and profits. Such metrics weren’t always given priority by investors looking to back new companies last year as a record amount of capital and low interest rates fuelled a race for returns, they say.

From WSJ Pro Venture Capital

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