4 Important Venture Capital Trends (2022-2024)

In the first quarter of 2022, global venture funding totaled an estimated $195 billion.

And it’s no secret that the venture capital arena is hotter than ever.

Which means trends in this space impact which companies and sectors will be dominant for years to come.

If you want to see the most important trends impacting the venture capital industry right now, read on.

1. The Number Of Mega-Deals Continue To Increase

A “unicorn” is a privately held start-up that has reached a $1 billion valuation.

It used to be a term that described a very small and exclusive cohort of private companies. That has now changed.

Back in 2015, there were roughly 142 unicorns in the world.

According to CB Insights, there are now 1,146 unicorns.

(With a collective value of $3.8 trillion.)

Looking at CB Insights’ data, we can see that there’s at least two hectocorn on the list (a privately-held start-up worth at least $100 billion).

One of those companies is Bytedance, the Chinese firm that owns popular social media app, TikTok.

Alongside Bytedance ($140 billion valuation), SpaceX is also now considered a hectocorn with a valuation of $125 billion. Shein ($100 billion) and Stripe ($95 billion) aren’t too far behind either.

Also on that list are more than 50 decacorns from a total of 84 minted since 2007 (companies worth at least $10 billion).

Some of the more well-known include Squarespace, Robinhood, Instacart, Epic Games, and Chime.

What’s the reason for this rapidly-growing number of highly-valued startups?

One reason is that venture capital funding rounds are getting larger.

The number of venture rounds worth at least $100 million has been steadily increasing since the second half of 2020.

There were 327 of these mega-deals in 2020 (just less than half of total VC deal volume).

And January of 2021 saw a record 102 venture-backed investment rounds worth $100 million or more.

December of 2020 and January and February of 2021 all saw record funding compared to prior years.

In fact, in January of 2021 alone, 38 new unicorns were created (23 of them in the United States). And in October, 43 new startups joined the unicorn list.

A lot of this new capital is coming from a few massive funds.

The median fund size in the U.S. grew by 69% in 2020 to $75 million – the largest since 2008.

Even in an impressive year like 2020, there were significantly fewer funds involved in venture fundraising.

In fact, Pitchbook also found that 15% of VC funds raised in the first nine months of 2020 were part of funds worth $1 billion or more.

While nothing has quite reached the level of Softbank’s Vision Funds, Andreeson Horowitz did raise two mega-funds in 2020, collectively worth $4.5 billion.

2. Equity Crowdfunding Gives Normal People Access To Venture Assets

Venture capital firms have dominated the startup world for as long as there have been traditional “startups.”

Now, investors from all other areas of the financial and business world are looking to gain access to the impressive returns enjoyed by the venture community.

Basically, equity crowdfunding platforms allow non-traditional (and even unaccredited) investors to have access to startups by pooling their money with other small investors.

There are basically two ways that equity crowdfunding platforms allow unaccredited investors to access private companies: Regulation Crowdfunding (CF) and Regulation A+.

In 2016, a section of the 2012 JOBS Act called Regulation CF came into effect.

This section allowed unaccredited investors to invest in private companies through equity crowdfunding platforms.

The platforms have to be broker dealers or funding portals registered with the SEC.

And anyone can now invest using equity crowdfunding platforms, regardless of their net worth or income.

There is, however, a cap on the size of each investment made in a company.

Before 2020, that number stood at $1.07 million.

But as of early 2021, the SEC raised the cap to $5 million in a 12-month period, giving unaccredited investors access to significantly larger funding rounds.

And Regulation CF has led to a surge in equity crowdfunding since 2016.

In 2020, Crowdwise estimated that $214.9 million was raised through equity crowdfunding platforms.

That’s more than double 2019’s number ($104.7).

In fact, 2020’s number is more than the total equity crowdfunding amount raised in 2016-2018 put together ($194 million).

Regulation A+, on the other hand, allows private companies to basically do a mini-IPO.

The companies can raise up to $75 million from both accredited and unaccredited investors.

While a private company can do this on their own, they typically raise the money through broker-dealers or crowdfunding portals (more on that later).

A Regulation A+ offering allows private companies to raise significantly more money from the public (think later venture rounds), but subjects them to higher reporting standards than Regulation CF.

WeFunder is the largest company in the Regulation CF funding space.

As of the Q4 2020, the company claims it captured over 40% of the Regulation CF crowdfunding market. And it raised $87 million in 2020 alone.

WeFunder allows investors to join a pool of funds with as little as $100. And the company claims it has now attracted close to a million users.

By the end of 2020, WeFunder had provided about $188 million in funding for startups and small businesses.

And these companies have attracted over $5 billion in follow-on investments after WeFunder invested in them.

By the end of 2022, WeFunder is expecting to contribute more funding ($600 million) than it has in its entire history.

StartEngine is the second-largest equity crowdfunding platform in the Regulation CF market. But it is the largest in the Regulation A+ market.

The company has now raised $400 million for startups and other private companies since its inception.

In 2020 alone, StartEngine raised $147 million for private companies (a year-over-year growth rate of 236% vs. 2019).

This figure had already been surpassed by the end of August 2021 ($150 million raised).

The company also boasts 600,000 users.

And it has participated in 500+ offerings.

The company counts Shark Tank star Kevin O’Leary as a strategic advisor (you may have seen his commercials on channels like CNBC).

And StartEngine has even staked its own valuation on Regulation A+ funding.

It went public in October 2020 through a Regulation A+ offering.

Since crowdfunded companies typically have illiquid shares and don’t want to comply with onerous SEC reporting requirements on public exchanges, StartEngine created its own secondary market in October of 2020 for Regulation A+ and Regulation CF funded companies to trade on.

After StartEngine and WeFunder, Republic.co is probably the third largest equity crowdfunding platform in the Regulation Crowdfunding space.

Overall (including Reg. A+ and CF), Republic has raised over $500 million in over 500 deals on its platform. And much of this has come since the start of 2020.

Republic has even raised $2.35 million and $11.2 million for popular private companies SpaceX and Robinhood through its platform.

Republic, in its dedication to the small investor, even allows investors to contribute as little as $10 to an investment.

Though it does note that the typical starting level is $100-$150.

In March of 2021, Republic itself raised $36 million in a Series A round to fund its ongoing growth.

This is especially important since the equity crowdfunding caps are rising this year.

The three leaders put together – WeFunder, StartEngine, and Republic.co – accounted for more than 80% of the Regulation CF funding in Q4 2020.

3. Venture Capital Leaves Silicon Valley

Traditionally Silicon Valley has captured the lion’s share of the venture capital and startup market.

Recently, however, a shift has begun.

But today, more of the VC industry is moving from Silicon Valley to other parts of the U.S. and the world.

According to Pitchbook’s 2021 Venture Capital Outlook, Silicon Valley was expected to account for under 20% of total VC funding in the U.S by the end of 2021.

That’s the lowest it has ever been.

In 2020, 22.7% of the total venture capital funding took place in Silicon Valley, the lowest it’s been in over 10 years.

In fact, according to CNBC, Silicon Valley’s share of total funding has been on the decline since 2006.

Part of the reason for this is the fact that a lot of startup founders are finding it less desirable to live in Silicon Valley.

From healthcare, to cybersecurity, to SaaS, more and more startup-related work can be done remotely.

And the Bay Area housing market is making it difficult for employees to find Silicon Valley livable.

Venture firm Initialized conducted a survey in 2020 and February of 2021 to see where the founders of their portfolio companies would base a startup if they had to do it again.

The findings were instructive.

Before the COVID-19 pandemic, the vast majority of the respondents chose Silicon Valley as the most desirable location.

By February of 2021, the most popular choice wasn’t a location at all.

Instead, 42.1% of respondents said that they would prefer their company to be completely remote.

While Silicon Valley remained the runner-up, Austin (a city that wasn’t listed in 2020) is now tied with New York for the third-most desirable location.

In addition, Seattle is basically out of the running. And cities like Denver and Miami are now considered contenders.

In fact, a fair amount of VC money is leaving the US altogether.

The US accounted for 50% of global VC investments in 2020.

That’s dropped significantly since 2008 when 68.25% of all venture investment came from the US.

Put in raw terms, VC investments outside the Americas totaled $136.2B in 2020.

Asia-based investment platforms are seeing significant growth.

According to Crunchbase, there are 4,299 VC investment organizations based in Asia.

Startup Bangladesh is a venture capital fund founded by the national ICT Ministry.

The organization, which is set up as a limited company, announced a round of investments worth $1.75M at the end of March 2021.

The funding was distributed among 7 early-stage businesses.

The fund intended to invest in 50 startups by the end of 2021.

Wise Road Capital is based in China.

The fund focuses on semiconductors and other high-tech industries.

The group makes worldwide investments.

Last year, Wise Road acquired a Swiss sensor company from Siemens.

Wise Road was a founder of the Financial and Information Technology Alliance, a global group of more than 100 finance and technology companies.

4. VCs Are Cashing Out

2020 and 2021 have seen a record number of IPOs and SPAC transactions.

Both the number of deals and the amount invested have been enormous.

In fact, 2020 and 2021 have seen the most IPOs since the 2000 tech bubble.

Of the IPOs in 2020, 103 of them involved venture-backed companies.

The group came public at a collective valuation of $220 billion – the highest annual exit value ever.

In addition to this, the number of venture-backed companies that are being acquired has increased over the past year as well.

The number of SPAC IPOs in 2020 and 2021 is also unprecedented.

There were 247 SPACs created in 2020 (more than 4x the number of SPACs in 2019).

And total deal volume increased by more than 6x 2019’s amount, growing to $75.39 billion from $12.01 billion.

A Special Purpose Acquisition Company (SPAC) is a vehicle through which private equity investors can take a company public.

Essentially, the SPAC sponsors raise capital for acquisition by issuing stock and warrants in a blank-check company.

The company has a mandate that requires it to complete an acquisition in two years or it will be forced to return capital to the shareholders.

Because SPACs can acquire private companies, this method of going public can be quicker and less onerous than a traditional IPO.

Overall, just shy of half of 2020’s total IPO market by volume was represented by SPACs.

More impressive than 2020’s results, however, are 2021’s.

In just the first few months of 2021, 306 SPACs were created. And they raised about $99 billion in gross proceeds.

Conclusion

Whether it’s the size of deals, the number of IPOs, or the rise of SPACs, it’s clear that the venture capital industry is changing.

The financial aspects of the market as well as the demographics are starting to affect how startups are funded.

Keep an eye on these VC trends. They’re poised to continue to shake up the space over the next few years.

 

Sources: Exploding Topics | Josh Howarth

Business Success: Talent, Skills, or What?

Have you ever asked yourself the following question: Is succeeding as an entrepreneur a matter of luck or do only the talented ones make it?

And this is our answer:

Luck isn’t enough, and talent isn’t enough either. You can have either one, or even both, and still fail. What you’re missing, with your question, is the work. Business success takes work. You can succeed without luck, and also without talent; but not without work.

 

 

The Largest Software Acquisition in History

Broadcom announced it will acquire VMWare for $70b, the largest software acquisition in history.

Remarkably, this goliath union transpires during the deepest bear market of the last ten years. This merger also suggests a wave of acquisitions may punctuate 2022, in particular, take-privates.

Public companies can’t hide from the 70% collapse in multiples the way startups can. Publics are marked to market daily. Big acquirers walking through the aisles of the stock exchanges are staring at buy-one-get-one-free specials.

Software companies haven’t been this cheap to buy for a decade. VMWare traded at a 4.4x enterprise-value-to-forward-revenue (EV/NTM) multiple down from 7.3x in 2019, a fall of 65%, consistent with its peers by growth rate.

Ticker Growth Rate EV/NTM Multiple
VMW 9% 4.4x
DBX 12% 3.6x
BOX 13% 4.5x
ZUO 14% 2.7x
AYX 14% 5.5x
Average 12% 4.14

MW traded at 4.4x before the acquisition. The sale pushed it to 6.6x

If VMWare is attractive, shouldn’t these other companies entice a cash-rich acquirer? Or a flush private equity firm desirous of a SaaS company’s consistent cash flow? Interest rates may be increasing, but they’re still low enough to make leveraged buy-out math work.

Plus, publics are “always on sale.” Anyone can submit a valid offer. Even more, public company boards are subject to intenser scrutiny and more frequent shareholder lawsuits, which makes them likelier to consider a sale, even if there’s just one offer.

Look no further than Elon’s on-again, off-again pursuit of Twitter as a real-time example of the tight-rope public companies must navigate after receiving unsolicited bids; and the destabilizing winds that a lack of other suitors and oppressive shareholder scrutiny bring. Acquisition targets are weakened after the market hears of an offer, and weaker still after they agree to terms and await a definitive agreement.

In this environment, with valuations plummeting, plus uncertainty and fear rampant in the market, we might see a vibrant M&A market for public companies and perhaps the reemergence of the Barbarians at the Gate, the corporate raiders.