Venture Cap Funding Down, but Not Out
Kevin Kelleher
04/21/08 - 01:18 PM EDT
Are venture capital investments getting sideswiped by the
financial turmoil?
So far, the answer is: not really.
Venture investments did slow in the first
quarter of 2008, but the decline in financing
to startups had less to do with the ripples of an
ailing economy than a sudden dropoff in investments in the biotech sector.
According to Dow Jones VentureSource, VC firms
invested $6.8 billion in U.S. companies during the
March quarter, down 7% from a year
ago. Recent quarters had been showing a slow but
steady increase in the amount of money invested by
VCs.
For the most part, VCs were not making smaller
investments as much as they were financing fewer
startups. Only 603 companies received venture money,
25 fewer than a year earlier.
VentureSource cautioned that one slow quarter
doesn't necessarily signify a trend. "While we are
watching closely to see if the slowdown in the overall
economy will infect the VC community, it's simply too
early to know for sure," said Jessica Canning,
VentureSource's research director. "The venture
industry is usually insulated from the immediate
effects of an economic downturn.
The biggest decline in investments came in
health-care companies, which declined 43% to $1.74
billion, spread throughout 142 companies. A year ago,
175 deals received $3.06 billion. Hardest hit were
biopharma startups, which saw 59% less VC money
this quarter.
Venture capitalists say they take a long view on
investing, looking for exits five years down the road
or more. In recent years, a recovering IPO market may
have accelerated the time schedules for incubating a
young company.
But the IPO market is one of the first to react to
economic downturns, as investors grow gun-shy about
often unproven startups going into a bear market.
VentureSource noted that IPOs are the preferred exit
for biotech companies in particular.
And the quarter was a bad one for VC exits. Only 5
VC-backed startups went public, raising $283 million.
Both were the lowest figures since the June quarter of
2003, the National Venture Capital Association said.
And only 56 venture-backed companies found exits
through M&A deals, the smallest number since the
fourth quarter of 2000.
Last quarter, as the IPO market grew quiet (despite the well-received entrances of
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however, VC firms didn't shy away from late-stage
investments, which typically are among the largest
they make. Late-stage rounds comprised 39% of
first-quarter venture fundings, up from 32% a year
ago. It was the seed rounds and first rounds that saw
the declines, dropping to 35% of the total from 42%
last year.
Bucking the trend, however, were information
technology companies. Investments in IT startups more
than doubled to $1.59 billion for 170 companies,
as VCs tried to find startups that could tap into the
fast-evolving Web.
VCs may have been also taking a cautious tone from
their own investors. In a separate report that
received little attention earlier this month, the NVCA
said money flowing into VC funds in the first quarter
slowed somewhat.
In the March quarter, 57 VC funds raised $6.3 billion,
less than half the $11.7 billion raised in the
previous quarter. It was the smallest number of funds
raising money since 2005.
In addition, the dollar amount was the lowest
since the March quarter of last year, when 83 VC firms
raised money. Only 5 of the 57 firms raised money for
new funds, the rest were follow-on investments for
existing funds, a percentage that the NVCA said was
remarkably low given recent quarters.
The decline comes after VC firms raised
$96 billion from 2005 through 2007 -- it may be that funds'
appetites may have been sated for now.
So yes, there was a modest slowdown in the
investing that VC firms did during the first quarter,
backed up by a slide decline in the money they, in turn, were
raising from their own investors. Those investors,
largely pension and institutional funds, are anything
if not cautious these days.
In fact, given all the talk only last summer about
a reinflation of a financial bubble in Silicon Valley
(supposedly driven by a resurgence of venture
capitalist greed) the pullback could well prove a good
thing -- provided, of course, that it doesn't last too
long or go too deep.