BY Fraser Tennant
Canadian venture capital (VC) and private equity (PE) markets returned to pre-pandemic levels in the first half of 2022, with PE investment almost doubling, according to a new report by the Canadian Venture Capital and Private Equity Association (CVCA).
In its ‘H1 2022 VC and PE Canadian Market Overview’, the CVCA reveals that C$1.65bn was invested across 182 deals in the second quarter of 2022, bringing the total for the first half of the year to C$6.2bn invested across 371 deals.
In terms of mega-deals, eight deals worth C$50m-plus closed in Q2 2022, valued at C$799m, bringing the total for the first half of 2022 to C$4bn closed across 25 deals. Moreover, investment in the early stages in Q2 remained strong, with the highest seed stage investment and deal count on record: C$263m across 104 deals.
“VC investment performance is mirroring the 2020 market,” said Kim Furlong, chief executive of the CVCA. “In choppy waters, we need to continue to ensure Canadian companies have access to capital. Programmes like the federal government’s Venture Capital Catalyst Initiative (VCCI) will be essential to help weather unpredictability.”
Sector-wise, information, communications & technology received two-thirds of all investment in the first half of 2022, with C$4.1bn invested across 205 deals. The life sciences sector received 10 percent of investment with C$622m across 55 deals.
As far as PE activity is concerned, deals under C$25m continue to make up the largest percentage of Canadian PE activity, with 87 percent of disclosed deals in the first half of 2022 in this category. Moreover, the average deal size continues to decrease steadily, reaching an all-time low in Q2 of C$11.81m.
“Private markets are normalising to pre-pandemic levels,” added Ms Furlong, chief executive of the CVCA. “After an outlier 2021, investors are closely monitoring macroeconomic volatility and public market trends, which are impacting the private capital investment environment. While the landscape is more challenging as we head into the second half of 2022, PE investors continue to actively invest and largely in Canada’s small and medium enterprises (SMEs).”
The industrial and manufacturing sector saw the most PE investment activity in H1 – C$1.36bn over 101 deals – followed by information and communications technology, C$998m over 77 deals, and the life sciences sector, C$87m over 55 deals.
Ms Furlong concluded: “In a lot of ways, 2021 was an abnormal year, particularly when it came to company valuation. What we are seeing now, is the correlation between the decrease in public markets slowly permeating the private markets.”