Venture Capital

US-based VC-backed companies raised close to $100bn in 2018, says new report

BY Fraser Tennant

US-based venture capital (VC)-backed companies raised close to $100bn across 5536 transactions in 2018 – the highest annual funding level since 2000 – according to PwC’s and CB Insight’s MoneyTree report  published this week.

While deal activity in 2018 was at its lowest level since 2013, the report reveals that US companies still raised a record number of mega-rounds in 2018, with 184 $100m-plus funding rounds. In addition, there was a record number of new unicorns in 2018, as 53 US VC-backed companies saw their valuation rise to over $1bn.

“2018 was a phenomenal year for US venture capital, with $99.5bn invested, a record-breaking 55 unicorn births, 184 mega-rounds and funding levels at $119.6bn, their highest level since 2000,” said Tom Ciccolella, PwC’s US venture capital leader. “There certainly continues to be a healthy availability of funds and appetite for investment, while the trend of fewer, bigger deals persists.”

Key highlights in the Q4 MoneyTree report include: (i) US deals and funding slipped in Q4, dropping from a record funding level of $28bn across 1325 deals in Q3 2018 to $25bn across 1211 deals in Q4 2018; (ii) seed-stage activity rose slightly to 23 percent of all deals, although this was still well below levels from a year prior; (iii) expansion-stage deal activity was up slightly, at 24 percent of all deals, compared to 20 percent a year prior; and (iv) median deal sizes were up across the board, with later-stage median deal size rising to $37.5m in Q4 2018, up from $32.4m from the previous quarter.

Regionally, San Francisco, Silicon Valley, New York, New England and Los Angeles all saw increases in funding levels in 2018. In San Francisco, funding jumped 55 percent, rising to $28bn. In New England, funding activity increased for the second straight year, to $11bn. Silicon Valley and New York saw an uptick in funding in 2018, increasing to $18bn and $13bn, respectively. Funding for Los Angeles-area companies increased slightly to $6bn.

“While this year saw the lowest level of deals since 2013, median deal sizes are up and $100m plus mega-deals are becoming standard," said Anand Sanwal, chief executive co-founder of CB Insights. "US companies raised a record 184 mega-rounds, a 53 percent increase compared to last year's record. While mid- and late-stage start-ups are winners in the current environment, the early stage is getting pinched with seed activity.  There does not appear to be a near-term catalyst to get seed activity growing again."

In terms of global VC funding, last year saw $207bn of VC funding raised globally across 14,247 transactions – a 10 percent increase in deal activity. Furthermore, 2018 came close to the funding record of 2000, a 21 percent jump compared to 2017. 

Report: Q4 2018 MoneyTree Report

Canadian VC funding declines for second straight quarter after record Q1, reveals new report

BY Fraser Tennant

Following a record Q1, Canadian venture capital (VC) funding declined in Q3 2018 for a second straight quarter, reveals a new report by PwC Canada and CB Insights.

According to the ‘MoneyTree Canada Report Q3 2018’, Canadian venture-backed companies closed 87 deals, down from 127 in Q2. At the same time, total VC funding totalled $541m in Q3 2018, a 42 percent decline in investment from the previous quarter.

However, despite the overall fall, there has been an increase in VC funding for Canadian digital health and FinTech companies in the third quarter of 2018.

“The first half of 2018 saw a new high in venture capital investment in Canada, and yet we have seen a marked decrease in deal activity in the third quarter,” said Michael Dingle, national deals technology leader at PwC Canada. “While a decrease does not come as a surprise, we will be sure to keep a close eye on investment trends for the following quarters as the tech sector in particular seeks to maintain funding levels.”

The report also notes that: (i) early-stage rounds increased to 30 percent of all Canadian deals, while seed stage deals declined to 25 percent of all deals; (ii) corporate investment in Canadian startups has been rising steadily in recent quarters, and increased to 39 percent of all deals in Q3 2018; (iii) corporate participation in deal activity increased for the third consecutive quarter; (iv) Toronto and Vancouver continued to drive the highest number of deals; and (v) investment in Canadian digital health companies jumped 170 percent to $83m, the third-straight quarterly increase.

While Vancouver and Toronto remained the top markets in deal activity, funding and deal activity for these cities decreased slightly in Q3 2018 to $104m across 21 deals and $248m across 30 deals, respectively. Montréal also saw a slight decline, falling to $95m over 16 deals during Q3 2018, compared to $105m over 17 deals in Q2 2018. In addition, Québec City experienced a significant decline in funding – from $147m to $14m – returning to its historical range, following a massive second quarter.

"While overall funding and deal activity among Canadian startups fell this quarter, there were bright spots like digital health and FinTech," said Anand Sanwal, co-founder and chief executive of CB Insights. "The digital health sector saw a 168 percent spike in funding -- the third-straight quarterly increase in this industry and well above the funding range in recent years."

Report: MoneyTree Canada Report Q3 2018

 

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